No Agenda - 1632 - "King for a Day"

Episode Date: February 8, 2024

No Agenda Episode 1632 - "King for a Day" "King for a Day" Executive Producers: Anna Muirhead Herbivore cliff riemersma I. P. Anonymously Zaryn Dentzel Associate Executive Producers: Sir Powers of ...Two" protecting Davie, FL Ethan Maas Zadoc Brown III Gigawatt Coffee Roasters LLC Sir Boober Benjamin Naidus Sir Cristobal Linda Lupatkin Become a member of the 1633 Club, support the show here Boost us with with Podcasting 2.0 Certified apps: Podverse - Podfriend - Breez - Sphinx - Podstation - Curiocaster - Fountain Title Changes Baroness Love and Light > Viscountess Love and Light, protectorate of Moreton Bay, Queensland Knights & Dames Matt Smith > Sir Smithlar of Constable Country Rich WB4EHG > Sir Powers of Two, protecting Davie, FL. Art By: Comic Strip Blogger - csb@getalby.com End of Show Mixes: Stefan - Steve Atwell - Jesse Coy Nelson Engineering, Stream Management & Wizardry Mark van Dijk - Systems Master Ryan Bemrose - Program Director Back Office Jae Dvorak Chapters: Dreb Scott Clip Custodian: Neal Jones Clip Collectors: Steve Jones & Dave Ackerman NEW: and soon on Netflix: Animated No Agenda Sign Up for the newsletter No Agenda Peerage ShowNotes Archive of links and Assets (clips etc) 1632.noagendanotes.com Directory Archive of Shownotes (includes all audio and video assets used) archive.noagendanotes.com RSS Podcast Feed Full Summaries in PDF No Agenda Lite in opus format Last Modified 02/08/2024 16:39:32This page created with the FreedomController Last Modified 02/08/2024 16:39:32 by Freedom Controller  

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Yeah! Ring finger! Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak. Thursday, February 8th, 2024. This is your award-winning Game on Asian Media Assassination episode 1632. This is no agenda. Commission to defeat Dr. Dan. Broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country
Starting point is 00:00:19 here in FEMA Region number 6. In the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry. Dan from Northern Silicon Valley. We don't want to call them migrants anymore. I'm John C. Dvorak. It's Crackpot and Buzzkill. In the morning.
Starting point is 00:00:32 You know this. They're asylum seekers. That's the official name. Actually, the official name. Oh, but maybe in California. No, no. This is Denver. We know Denver leads the way for everything.
Starting point is 00:00:48 I was going to say California light, please. Denver. California heavy. We got California heavy, everybody. It's California heavy. We're coming in light. Yes. Apparently the term migrant
Starting point is 00:01:03 is not good so we're going to change it to uh even though it should be illegal immigrant or illegal alien illegal alien was what it was first that was that was that was what it was good stuff yeah back in the day they're going to change it to new immigrant oh oh it's the it's the newcomers why don't we just call them that the newcomers yeah like some science fiction creepy science fiction movie wasn't that v like maybe the visitors the visitors maybe it was v newcomers newcomers and the visitors make room make room make room for the newcomers. The newcomers and the visitors. Make room. Make room.
Starting point is 00:01:45 Move. Make room for the newcomers. Make room. Put the newcomers here. You out. Well. Isn't this what they claim that the Israelis did to the Palestinians? Take the newcomers and then push the other ones out?
Starting point is 00:01:59 Isn't that what they've been doing here with these guys? I don't see the difference if they're going to use that analogy. Well, if that's where you want to start today, then I think we should go straight to... I never said that. I think we should go straight... Good segue, though. I really appreciate the professionalism. Well, let's go straight to MSNBC, which is Denver heavy.
Starting point is 00:02:24 And Chris Hayes Show, talking to AOC. Our actress come house representative for New York. And she lays it out. Very clear and simple what this is really about. And you tweeted this because I've been maddened by the discussion of immigrants, which basically I feel like the entire discussion is they're coming to take your stuff. There's only seven slices of pizza in America and everyone. Hold on.
Starting point is 00:02:55 I'm going to be interrupted. You're all going to. Okay. All right. I just advance warning. All right. Who used to whoever uses the word maddened? I'm maddened by this.
Starting point is 00:03:10 Look at the guy. I'm angered. I've heard people say angered. It irks me. That's what I say. Just look at Chris Hayes. But I'm maddened. He's pretentious.
Starting point is 00:03:21 Okay. I'll give that one to you. But you know, he's with AOC. So it kind of, I'm maddened. Aren't you, AOC? I'm maddened by this, aren't you, Daphne? And you tweeted this because I've been maddened by the discussion of immigrants, which basically I feel like...
Starting point is 00:03:38 I think this is a very good observation. He's going mad. That's what it is. I'm maddened. I'm maddened. He's not angry. He's going mad. I'm going mad. The entire discussion is i'm mad i'm mad he's not angry he's going mad i'm going mad the entire discussion is they're coming to take your stuff there's like only seven slices of pizza in america and everyone that comes is going to take one of those hold on a second how many slices
Starting point is 00:03:57 are there in a pizza why it wouldn't be seven that's for sure i've never seen a seven slice pizza you can't do it. No, it makes no sense. It's going to be eight slices. It could be two slices. Yes, it could be. It could be four slices. I mean, you could, but it's always going to be multiples of two. All right, now we are in Miedernocher.
Starting point is 00:04:18 Let's keep going here. They're coming to take your stuff. There's like only seven slices of pizza in America, and everyone that comes is going to take one of those slices and you're not going to have any. And the Congressional Budget Office basically said today, look, we're readjusting our projection of GDP. You've got me on a roll here. Does the Congressional Budget Office literally say, look, is that what they say? Is that how they start?
Starting point is 00:04:41 Not that I know of. Is that how they start their reports? He claims,. Look. Growth. Up by $7 trillion. And also, we're reading the U.S. government money to reduce the deficit by a trillion because of immigration. Higher net immigration. And you tweeted that being like, guys, we're not talking at all.
Starting point is 00:04:59 We're giving them free money. Oh, wait for the next clip. You started this off. All about the net positives immigrants bring to this country. All right, net positives. Hit it, AOC. Absolutely. It is actually completely nonsensical that we do not talk about the enormous blessing,
Starting point is 00:05:18 economic blessing that immigrants and immigration represents to the United States of America. And a lot of folks sometimes think that this is just a certain kind of immigrant, right? Like college educated or technical visas. All immigrants that we're seeing, this is the CBO estimate. Immigration writ large is yielding enormous economic benefits to the United States. Oh, wait a minute. I'm feeling slavery coming on. And let's bring this out even finer.
Starting point is 00:05:49 If you are a caregiver, if you are a baby boomer, if you are someone that cares for... John, John, if you're a baby boomer, this is for you. This is information. For someone who... Yeah, I'm going to need an immigrant. A nurse, a nurse to wipe your butt. An immigrant to take care of me and rob me.
Starting point is 00:06:06 It's aging. We currently do not have the economic or social structural capacity to take care of our seniors. And we will increasingly not have that if we, quote unquote, lock up our border and shut down immigration. In fact, the thing that has distinguished U.S. economic performance from other countries like Japan or other developed economies is the fact that our pro-immigration policies actually allow us to continue in our economic growth, whereas similar countries with anti
Starting point is 00:06:42 or more kind of closed border policies experience economic stagnation when they submit themselves to this xenophobic kind of border panic narrative that fox news frankly seeks to peddle and instill in so many people fox news all right now by the way this does she account for the fact that these stagnant countries like, oh, let's say Japan, just bought U.S. steel out from under us? I guess that doesn't matter. All right. So before I get to my next clip, let's just remind ourselves what the former New York banker said. Adam, we don't have to be worried about China.
Starting point is 00:07:21 They are declining in population. As long as we keep adding people we win and now who is that i've said it i'll say it again i said it before if china is in such a bad state because of the declining population how come about 40 of the youth of china can't get work well they're sitting there waiting for jobs yeah well aren't you saying the same thing no it no the argument is that because china's declining population that means that means that the they're going to be overworked to pay for no no no no no no no it's about printing money the more people we have the more money we get to print for them through all kinds of great plans and ultimately going to universal basic income.
Starting point is 00:08:08 This is the plan. Now, in the United States, HSBC just came out with global research. Actually, this is for all developed economies. They predict the population of all developed economies will be cut in half by 2,100. And it notes a very sharp decline starting in 2021. I wonder what happened. Less babies made. I'm not quite sure. We should be having a baby boom right now. After all the lockdowns. We're having sudden deaths instead. It's exactly the opposite. Now, to back up what AOC says, let's go to chairman of the Federal Reserve,
Starting point is 00:08:50 our central bank money printer go brr guy on 60 Minutes. Now, remember, he doesn't set policy, but he's really happy with it. What are the important factors that cause the labor market to stabilize? This comes on the heels of an unbelievably good jobs report like twice as much as expected which i don't know how that happened all i all i fudge the numbers it's really easy okay so they all right so they fudge i think it's jobs. I think it's maybe some government, some people taking third jobs. But but but listen to what Powell says. It's it's truly unbelievable. What are the important factors that cause the labor market to stabilize?
Starting point is 00:09:36 One was just the return of workers. Several million people were just gone from the labor force for whatever reason. Many of them didn't want to go back to their old jobs because of COVID or because they just didn't want to be. They had moved on with their lives. So, so like, I'm not going to work. I'm just moving on with my life here. I'm not going to work anymore. I'm just moving on, moving on with my life. Yeah, this is so great. They had moved on with their lives. So, so there was a desperate shortage of workers. And what happened is we expected people to come right back into the workforce in 2022. They mostly didn't. And then we thought, well, maybe that's not going to happen. And then it happened in 2023. We had a combination of rising labor force participation in prime age workers. And we also had, with that, we had a
Starting point is 00:10:22 resumption of immigration. So there was really no immigration net in, or very little during the pandemic. But it kind of makes me wonder, like, you know, if we had no net immigration during the pandemic, maybe they have to catch up. And maybe that's what we're seeing. Like, open them as wide as possible, boys. We need to get them in. In 2023, we saw immigration move back up to the levels that would have been normal before the pandemic. And those two things together made a real difference in labor supply. So it's really a supply story. That's the main thing I would point to. Why was immigration important? Because immigrants come in and they tend to work at a rate that is at or above that for non-immigrants.
Starting point is 00:11:05 Cheap labor. Let me translate what he just said. They're better than you. They tend to work, of course, in the jobs that AOC wants them to be in, and they work at about or a little bit above. They do it a little bit better than you at wiping John's butt. Immigration important. Because immigrants come in and they tend to work
Starting point is 00:11:25 at a rate that is at or above that for non-immigrants. Immigrants who come to the country tend to be in the workforce at a slightly higher level than Americans do, but that's largely because of the age difference. Hold on a second. Why doesn't he just say it? They work cheaper. It's coming. It's coming....than Americans do, but that's largely because of the age difference. They tend to skew younger. Why is immigration so important to the economy? First of all, immigration policy is not the Fed's job. We don't say immigration policy. We don't comment on it.
Starting point is 00:11:58 I will say over time, though, the U.S. economy has benefited from immigration. And frankly, just in the last year, a big part of the story of the labor market coming back into better balance is immigration returning to levels that were more typical of the pre-pandemic era. The country needed the workers. It did. Yeah, we just needed the workers. You're not good enough. You're too old. You're too expensive.
Starting point is 00:12:23 And you're not. You know, they do just a little bit better that's the message there it is better equals cheaper yeah oh yeah of course so we had um man no sooner had a marked up and hold on a second i'm sticking with here's another thing so joe i had these clips from the last show uh in fact, I want you to play this clip. This is just like irksome to listen to. Let me see if I can find it. Hold on
Starting point is 00:12:51 one second. It's Biden's look for Biden It's not on that The show comes to a screeching halt. Yeah, well, I'm sorry, but Biden, the thing is Biden's going on. Yeah, well, I'm sorry, but Biden did. The thing is, is Biden's going on.
Starting point is 00:13:06 OK, I'll just reiterate it. Biden's going on and on about how great he is. A labor union, the UAW approved him because I have it. I have it. I have your clip. United Auto Workers President Sean Fain last week. That one. Yep. Delivered a fiery speech in washington to endorse biden he told face the nation sunday why he chose biden over trump president biden has
Starting point is 00:13:32 always bet on the american worker and stood with the american worker and he proved that during this presidency yeah the chinese worker and the venezan worker. Yeah, the American worker. So let's bring more immigrants in to take jobs away from who? The American worker. How does this make sense? The UAW guy should be ashamed of himself. I was a twice member of the United Auto Workers on withdrawal. And it's shameful how they went from a very good union to a guy like, just a corrupt, classic, old- old-fashioned union right so all we're
Starting point is 00:14:07 seeing here and it's really interesting because on the last show we talked about how the uh the republicans are all ah the borders open this is no good you know you gotta the democrats suck biden sucks borders open border border border board not saying it's not true and the democrats like war war war iran we gotta get some more now they're going into each other's camp and we've got uh we've got by biden blaming trump that the whole the whole media is of course blaming trump for this is all trump's fault why is it trump's fault because trump doesn doesn't want the Republicans to fix anything. All indications are this bill won't even move forward to the Senate floor. Why? The reason Donald Trump, because Donald Trump thinks is bad for him politically. He'd rather weaponize this issue
Starting point is 00:14:58 than actually solve it. Trump and the Magna Republicans said no because they're afraid of Donald Trump. Afraid of Donald Trump. Republicans have to decide who do they serve, Donald Trump or the American people? Every day between now and November, the American people are going to know that the only reason the border is not secure is Donald Trump and his MAGA Republican friends. Folks, we've got to move past this toxic politics. Alright, so... Before you continue, it did go to the Senate floor. I have all this. Okay. But I wanted to
Starting point is 00:15:33 step back a second and say no sooner had I marked up the 320 pages of H.R. 815, which was the House version of the Senate bill, then they blew this all up. No, true okay these the senate bill is separate the house bill is separate they were not how it wasn't a version of the of the senate bill okay it's not it was its own bill its own bill which by the way
Starting point is 00:16:01 was uh you know how this is so cool how they do this. So they put this bill in H.R. 15. I'll get to the Senate bill in a second. And H.R. 15 is meant to amend Title 38 United States Code to make certain improvements relating to the eligibility of veterans to receive reimbursement for emergency treatment furnished through the Veterans Community Care Program and for other purposes. So they literally take take something
Starting point is 00:16:25 that was a bill that was i guess on the floor and they just take all of that out and then and then turn it into the emergency national security supplemental appropriations act of 2024 oh my god this thing was was it this was a military bill i mean we're for submarine bases i mean we're literally you know part of the part the border part was we need two billion dollars to give to countries so when we send people back they can repatriate them can you imagine how insane that is so we're sending people back that who came in illegally, but we're going to give all these countries $2 billion to catch them so they don't run into trouble. I mean, we're giving it to Venezuela?
Starting point is 00:17:12 I marked it up for anyone who wants to take a look at it. It's useless now, of course, but I kind of knew that was going to happen. So here's the bipartisan bill that died. The bipartisan bill to strengthen the border and provide aid for Ukraine and Israel died in the Senate Wednesday. Senate Republicans have looked more and more like their House counterparts and transformed themselves into the chaos caucus. Senators on both sides of the aisle spent more than four months negotiating the details. We knew from the beginning it's not going to be perfect, but we also knew the status quo was untenable. Despite Republican leadership backing the compromise, many of the rank and file were dead set against it.
Starting point is 00:17:54 I think a Republican leader should actually lead this conference and should advance the priorities of Republicans. The final straw came when former President Donald Trump slammed the efforts. It turns out border security is not actually a risk to our national security. It's just a talking point for the election. Even if the bill had passed in the Senate, Republicans in the lower chamber of Congress declared it dead on arrival in the House. Republicans are not passing the bill to address the border, but they're still planning to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas over his handling of the immigration issue. The yeas are 214 and the nays are 216. The resolution is not adopted. Even though they
Starting point is 00:18:38 failed to impeach him on the first vote Tuesday night. Mayorkas needs to be held accountable. The Biden administration needs to be held accountable. And we will pass those articles of impeachment. Republicans fell one vote short Tuesday night, but they expect to try again when Louisiana Congressman Steve Scalise is healthy enough to return to work. All right. So this is all show. Stay away from it. There's nothing to see here. The fun stuff is in the cities with the black mayors. This is where it gets great. Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson. Mr. Mayor, when are you going to go to the border and check it out? We got trouble here, Mr. Mayor. We got people sleeping everywhere in our city. We got migrants everywhere and you're giving them money. Mr. Mayor, what are you going
Starting point is 00:19:21 to do? When are you going to go to the border and check it out and get something done? I have children who attend schools who have soccer games, y'all. You know, you all are asking me as if I'm not a parent in this city. I get it. I'm mayor. I get it. But you're asking me to give you a date. And I have to court. Do you understand that you have not had a mayor like me?
Starting point is 00:19:39 I get that. I have a wife. I have children. They have schedules. And plus, we still have public safety that we have to address we still have the unhoused that we have to address I still have a budget that I have to address and I'm doing all of that with a black wife
Starting point is 00:19:53 raising three black children on the west side of city of Chicago, I am going to the border as soon as possible hey hold on a second, I'm black, give me a break what was that? I mean I'm sorry. This is just crazy.
Starting point is 00:20:08 Hey, I like the beginning where he says, I know you're not used to a mayor with kids, Larry Lightfoot. But then he rolls into, hey, you know, I got schedules. I'm raising three black children. I got a black wife. I have things to do. Yeah, and then Mayor Adams in New York, he's like, people don't like me. You know why they don't like me? Because I'm black.
Starting point is 00:20:27 Have you ever seen this much chocolate lead in the city of New York? Oh, what a racist. I've been going down the line. Look, look who's here. This is representative of the city. That's why people are hating on me. You trying to figure out why they're hating on me they're hating on me because those are how many of you go to church here we go ma'am this is a matthew 21
Starting point is 00:20:56 and 12 moment jesus walked in the temple he saw them doing wrong in the temple he did what he turned the table i went to city hall to turn the table over all right black jesus everybody there it is black jesus he overturned the tax tables apparently in city hall this is this is very weak mayors this is very very weak but they're under pressure you know they're under pressure they can't they can't say anything about because again this is that we don't need comprehensive immigration reform we've we've kind of lost the whole idea that we don't even need it we can just change it's like no stop them no it's like you know this is this is policy not law the law is clear well i want to go back i want to go back to your uh that that biden clip where he blames Trump. Mm hmm.
Starting point is 00:21:45 No, it's nonstop. It's nonstop. This is this is Trump. This is the thing. Yeah. So I looked into the Senate bill that did go to the floor and did get voted down 50 to 49. Yeah. Do you know who voted no?
Starting point is 00:22:02 Chuck Schumer. His own bill. Yeah, he voted no on his own bill but what really happened is it would have passed yeah but the problem was for schumer is that a bunch the typical kind of dem dem republicans voted yes on it that includes lankford of oklahoma susan collins of maine murkowski and and Mitt Romney. They all voted yes. So it would have passed. It wouldn't have passed with 60 votes, but it would have passed.
Starting point is 00:22:31 And you wouldn't have had the Trump, Trump, Trump stuff. You wouldn't have Biden's talking points. So what Schumer did is he voted no and then got four of his lackeys to also vote no for no apparent reason. That includes Elizabeth Warren voted no. Marky Padilla of California, who's the substitute for Feinstein, and he has to do what he's told. So he was told to vote no, so he did. And Menendez of New Jersey, who's under indictment,
Starting point is 00:22:58 who has to do what Schumer tells him to, so he could twist it so it came out 50 to 49 exactly because he had to account for all these republicans who voted for the bill so the thing was a scam used as a publicity stunt and nobody knows that schumer voted no well we couldn't we can't report on that there's not one report you can come up with where it meant no mentions that schumer voted against his own bill no of course not of course not and and governor abbott the globalist just continues to abuse eagle pass texas as his theater du jour governor greg abbott will meet with state representatives in eagle pass all to discuss border security this all comes comes in response to President Biden's border
Starting point is 00:23:45 policies, which Abbott, of course, disagrees with. Prior to the press conference, the governor and Texas representatives will receive a briefing on Operation Lone Star's mission to secure the border. That meeting will take place at Shelby Park, which was once a busy area for illegal crossings by migrants and where the state's AG rejected a request from the Biden administration to grant federal immigration officials full access to that park. All right, now I need some help from you. I need help understanding the thinking behind the latest episode of NBC's Chicago Med, which I would say most of these programs are propaganda. You've played so many clips from these types.
Starting point is 00:24:27 Who produces this? Who produces Chicago Med? Is it another one? That's done by Dick Wolf. So it's a Dick Wolf production. Yeah. So explain to me now how he gets into these storylines where we have Mr. Martin gets hit by a car wreck, and he wants to press charges because the man that hit him is probably here illegally.
Starting point is 00:24:52 Officer, are you here to take my statement? Excuse me? I want to press charges on that guy right over there. I overheard someone say that he might be here illegally. I need to make sure that doesn't affect my insurance. I'll have someone come speak to you, Mr. Martin, Wade Martin. Okay,'ll have someone come speak to you. Mr. Martin. Wade Martin.
Starting point is 00:25:06 Okay. Give me a minute. Thank you. All right. So now we're going to go to the hospital because, of course, we've got the guy's wife in the hospital. And, well, wouldn't you know it? Do you have a moment? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:16 Seems I'm in a bit of a pickle. How so? I'm officially here as Mr. Obrador's emergency contact. What? He's being sheltered in the lobby of our district. And he's not the only one. They set up camp about a week ago. That's why he has to call the police.
Starting point is 00:25:30 And it's not just us. There are migrants in almost every district of the city. And the buses keep coming up from the border almost every day. They're fleeing a pretty horrific situation down in Venezuela. Venezuela. Venezuela. All right. So now Mr. Martin is waiting for his wife to have an MRI, but no.
Starting point is 00:25:47 Dr. Marcel. Yeah. It's been over an hour and my wife hasn't gotten an MRI yet. I assure you we have not forgotten. Dr. Ahmad said she'd make it a priority, but I haven't seen a trace of her. As soon as an MRI frees up, Mr. Martin, I promise she's next in queue. Yeah, yeah. Next in queue.
Starting point is 00:26:03 What doctor says that? Next in queue. None. Next in queue. No, yeah. Next in queue. What doctor says that? Next in queue. None. Next in queue. No, because the immigrants, the illegal aliens, go first. Wait, why are you moving my wife? Sir, please, it's just temporary. Hey, Mr. Martin. You okay? What's going on? Did you two authorize this? Mr. Martin, my apologies.
Starting point is 00:26:17 It appears we're momentarily over. You think I don't see what's going on, but you're giving all the rooms to them. Hold on. Same thing happened at my kid's school. They commandeered her gym for a shelter. Look, Wade, I assure you we have enough resources to take care of everyone. No, we don't. People keep saying that, but we just don't, okay?
Starting point is 00:26:33 The whole volleyball season got canceled, and my daughter needed that for a scholarship, and now my wife. She's obviously not receiving your full attention. How come nobody's looking out for us? I understand that this is an inconvenience, but we do need to free up this room, go ahead get away from her please stop handling me no get away from me get off of me get off of me no i'm very confused about the messaging here
Starting point is 00:27:03 is the messaging like don't be a douche? Is the messaging if you are a douche, you're going to get apprehended and go to jail? Is the message we're being overrun? I don't understand the message. Here's the last clip. Any updates? I wish I could say this was an isolated incident. But from what I'm hearing around town, it seems like the welcome wagon's broken down
Starting point is 00:27:26 rosado's offering to take mr martin into custody if we feel the staff safety is threatened what is the messaging well the messaging i mean if you look at it just overtly uh if you make a fuss you're gonna get yeah you're gonna get yourself in trouble. Detained, yes, yes. But at the same time, it's also saying, you know, who watches this? Nobody. It has ratings.
Starting point is 00:27:56 Yeah, it does. It actually gets watched. Yeah, it gets watched quite a bit. There's three of them. There's a Chicago PD, Chicago Mad, and Chicago Fire. And it's a chicago pd uh chicago mad and chicago fire and they're it's a it's a trio of shows that are interlaced troika a troika of shows and they tend to be um uh they're very it's a very strange uh bunch of shows i have to say so you don't have an analysis of why they're doing this i mean i don't have one i don't watch So you don't have an analysis of why they're doing this. I mean, I don't have one.
Starting point is 00:28:25 I don't watch this. Well, you don't have to watch it to know that something's up with that message. Yeah. Especially with the, she's next in queue. Really? Yeah. No. I would just say she's next in line.
Starting point is 00:28:40 That's what people say. The normal person says that she's next in line, not she's next in especially in chicago code in chicago to let you know yeah in chicago they she's next in line she's next in queue she's next in queue and then and then 60 minutes uh did a piece on um the chinese my aliens visitors newcomers visitors, newcomers, the Chinese newcomers. Chi-I-Cho. Chi-I-Cho. It was beautiful art. Which was also confusing to me because these were not military-aged men.
Starting point is 00:29:16 These are women, primarily. And the women came in, you know, clean clothes, clean wraps, clean shoes. A couple of them had little roller bags. Just after sunrise, we saw the first group of migrants make their way from Mexico through a gap between the 30-foot steel border fence and rocks. Ducking under a bit of razor wire and into the United States. We were surprised to see the number of people coming through from China, nearly 7,000 miles away.
Starting point is 00:29:44 Cameras and, at one point, this armed border patrol agent standing 25 feet away did not deter them. 30 minutes later, a smuggler's SUV raced along the border fence and dropped another group at the same spot. And 30 minutes after that, another group. Over four days, we witnessed nearly 600 migrants, adults and children, pass through this hole and onto U.S. soil unchecked. The Gap is a global destination littered with travel documents from around the world. But we noticed middle-class migrants from China arriving with rolling bags. They told us they took flights all the way to Mexico.
Starting point is 00:30:33 Some flew from China to Ecuador because it doesn't require a visa for Chinese nationals, then took flights to Tijuana, Mexico. The migrants told us they connected with smugglers, or what they call snakeheads, in Tijuana. And they each paid them about $400 for the hour-long drive that ended here at the Gap. Last year, U.S. Customs and Border Protection reported 37,000 Chinese citizens were apprehended crossing illegally from Mexico into the U.S. U.S. Customs and Border Protection told us their agents don't have authority to stop people from coming through gaps like this one and can only arrest them after they've entered illegally as for closing that gap they said it is on their priority list but would require money from congress hold on let me check my to-do list um yeah it's up there it's next in queue so this is also some kind of propaganda um and and i have to say just looking at this 60 minutes
Starting point is 00:31:26 uh piece uh to me it seems like exactly as you said you know this 30 40 unemployment in china although i've had people say that's not possible they can't travel they gotta be spies i don't know they're not there is an element of that, but Chinese do travel. Of course they travel, and they can travel to all other countries. I mean, you have to get permission to travel, but they travel. Yeah, and then they come in here because they're looking for jobs. Of course, nail salons, kitchens. Oh, there you go. Peeling the toilet.
Starting point is 00:32:01 It's better than what they've got. But let's not joke around that i think there's also parents and chinese parents are just like every other parents they're like hey this really sucks here we got a crappy government there's no work i'm gonna sell the car i don't have a car i'm gonna sell the house and i'm gonna get you out i'm gonna get you to america i think that think that's also happening. This is a worldwide plan. I believe that is happening.
Starting point is 00:32:28 It has to be. And it's the International Office of Migration that is everywhere. Now, what we get to see to psych us up is Darien Gap. These people are not coming through the Darien Gap. They got clean shoes. Everyone saw these guys that went to the Darien Gap, traveled for a week. Yeah, there's some very sad stories of the stories of the Darien Gap. That may be 1% of people.
Starting point is 00:32:51 No, this story, this way, this is being presented where they just go to get in a 4x4 and they, a four-wheeler or a four-by-four, a Jeep or whatever it is. It's an Escalade. It's like an Escalade. An Escalade. They get in an Escalade. They get driven for a coupleade. An Escalade. They get in an Escalade. They get driven for a couple of hours and dropped off.
Starting point is 00:33:07 It's a $400 cab ride is what it amounts to. It's like a Chinese Uber. Yeah. Yeah. No, I know. It makes nothing but sense. That's what you'd do.
Starting point is 00:33:16 First, you'd find the most efficient way of getting over. Yeah. You wouldn't walk your ass off. No. No. No.
Starting point is 00:33:27 So, but in the meantime, the literal guy who prints the money is like, hey, thank God we've got immigration back up. That's good. And he says immigration. He knows, we knew what he means. People coming across the border. He says, thank God, thank God. There's so many jobs.
Starting point is 00:33:44 We just didn't, you know, people moved on with their lives here in America. They left their jobs and moved on. You can see all the tents around on the streets. Yes, they moved on. They moved on to drugs. They moved on to camping on the streets. That's the disgusting part.
Starting point is 00:33:59 And we all go, oh, yeah, other spies, military-age men. Oh, please. And it's world. I was asked on a Dutch program yesterday. It's exactly the same thing. It's exactly the same. And everybody's sick of it.
Starting point is 00:34:14 And remember, 40% of the world votes this year. So, you know, and of course, of course, we need to play this out for nine more months. Of course Trump is telling everybody, keep that going. This is great. Of course, of course he is. He wants to be president. Is it any worse than pretending to fight Iran by bombing some crap in Jordan or Syria only to legitimize that we're there
Starting point is 00:34:47 oh man i got one last clip this is cbs on the crumbling of the plan as migrants continue to cross congress is frozen in place it shows how broken washington dc is a u.s senate plan to stiffen border security tighten requirements for, and nearly shutter the border during spikes of migrant crossings had the endorsement of Senate leaders. I didn't see any of that in any bill. Did you see any of that? We're going to shutter the border? No, it was money for more agents. In fact, there's one of the supporters of the bill, a Democrat, tweeted that there's actually no closing of the border mentioned even in the bill.
Starting point is 00:35:24 No, it's for more personnel. No, the whole thing was, the bill was a scam designed to get the Republicans to vote no so they could be accused of not wanting to change this. And then since it didn't work out because the Republicans were voting yes on it, at least a few of them,
Starting point is 00:35:40 Schumer voted no. I'm going to hound people about this. That's very good, John. That's an excellent observation. And a National Border Patrol union. My Republican colleagues changed their minds. Turns out they want all talk and no action. The motion is not agreed to.
Starting point is 00:35:57 But it collapsed in a vote late today. In part because former President Trump opposed it. Was Trump on the floor? Was he there? Trump was there voting no. Trump opposed it. Was Trump on the floor? Was he there? Trump was there voting no. Trump said no. Hey, get him out of here. Action.
Starting point is 00:36:11 The motion is not agreed to. But it collapsed in a vote late today, in part because former President Trump opposed it. Americans are ticked off that this is not resolved. I'm ticked off. How about you, John? Are you ticked off? Nobody's ticked off. It's next in queue. Are you ticked off? Nobody's ticked off.
Starting point is 00:36:25 It's next in queue. The impasse is a blow also to cities like Chicago, where alderman Byron Sitcho Lopez is helping the city respond to thousands of migrants bused from the border. The federal government has exacerbated and worsened the issue at the border. The Senate today then shifted to a new plan with tens of billions of dollars to help Ukraine and Israel, but no border changes. It'll face stiff resistance in the House. I mean, this place is just, it's just chaos, right? The failures happened a day after House Republicans came up one vote short in trying to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. Was it a surprise how it played out? I don't think it was a surprise. It was more of a disappointment. Texas Democrat Al Green, hospitalized near the Capitol after
Starting point is 00:37:09 intestinal surgery, made a surprise appearance on the floor, casting the deciding vote. You had to sign a waiver to get out of the hospital to vote? It was an acknowledgement that I understood that there could be some consequences that could be at first to my best interest to do this. Our hero, Al. The House could vote as early as next week on a second attempt to impeach Secretary Mayorkas, further inflaming an already fiery and gridlocked Congress. Okay, so that is the show that nobody wants to go to. No one is interested in your stupid little show. And no one's interested in your war. show and no one's interested in your war we'll get to
Starting point is 00:37:46 that in a moment because right now in this season of reveal we have breaking news breaking news from the uk britain's king charles has been diagnosed with cancer buckingham palace has issued a statement saying that the cancer was discovered while the king was undergoing a separate procedure for an enlarged prostate. That news coming out in just the last hour. We need to go back in time for a moment. We need to go back to December 8th, 2022, episode 1,510 of this podcast.
Starting point is 00:38:20 And UK has to have punished. Well, I have not heard the thing about Charles. This is interesting. That's why I call around, man. Hey, man, what are you talking about today, Charles? I believe it right away. It's like, oh, people are mad. They hate Charles.
Starting point is 00:38:38 I think it's also some, you know, they're just pushing their anger onto him. Why not? He's a painful type. If what you say is true, they're going to have to do something because they have to have a coronation. They can't just let this last. They're going to have to kill him. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:54 So MI6 or MI5, it'd be 5, or GCHQ, those guys, one of these spooky groups up there, they're going to have to get the old pricker out of the safe and kill him. I believe you're right. I really think you're right.
Starting point is 00:39:13 And Harry has always been the designee. You know, Charles' mom hung in as long as she could. She did not want to see Charles on the throne. And everyone knows Harry is the chosen one one so i think you're right now uh we could put in the red book the question is how what is the best way to do it we need a cover story from the red book from the red book cover story oh we discovered some worse cancer than the S. He's done. He's toast. He's over.
Starting point is 00:39:48 He's out. Willis on deck. No, he wasn't going to be. No, we knew it. We knew it. We knew it. This is the point. We knew it. I mean, who knows what is going on?
Starting point is 00:39:58 But he's out. Harry even flew out. He's dead man walking right now. He's dead man. King for a day. Dead man walking. dead man walking. King for a day. Dead man walking. Dead man walking. I feel sorry to laugh about it, but that's what it is.
Starting point is 00:40:11 That's what it is. That's what they do. Okay, I think before we get into war, because it's just a lot of nat pops, or as I heard recently, a nat package. This is a new term for us. Nat pops, nat package. This is a new term for us. Nat pops, nat package. I think we must talk about, of course it happens on a show day.
Starting point is 00:40:30 Tucker Carlson's going to interview Putin. Oh no, oh no, oh no, oh no. This is great. It's, I mean, he doesn't, he needs zero promotion budget. He doesn't have to promote anything. The mainstream media goes out I mean, he needs zero promotion budget. He doesn't have to promote anything. The mainstream media goes out and promotes his interview for him.
Starting point is 00:40:53 What is going on? He's picked up some tips from Trump. Listen to Aaron Burnett, unhinged. A massive shakeup in Kyiv coming as Putin is trying to court the MAGA GOP in the United States. In fact, one of the leaders of the MAGA GOP is in Moscow tonight. Did you know Tucker's a leader? He's a leader. Tucker is somehow a leader of the MAGA movement? Since when?
Starting point is 00:41:19 Of the MAGA GOP, baby. It's the man you see here with the MAGA leader Donald Trump, Tucker Carlson, possibly there in Moscow to interview Putin. Definitely there as a supporting celebrity. Look at them talking about him like a celebrity. Everything he does on camera, breathlessly repeated. Now, it is unclear if an interview between Putin and Carlson will take place. But if it does, it gives Putin a chance to sit down with a big supporter. If it does, it gives Putin a chance to sit down with a big supporter. It might be worth asking yourself, since it is getting pretty serious, what is this really about?
Starting point is 00:41:52 Why do I hate Putin so much? Has Putin ever called me a racist? Has he threatened to get me fired for disagreeing with him? Does he eat dogs? These are fair questions. And the answer to all of them is no. You know what that is, right? Vladimir Putin didn't do any of that. Yeah, but what was the dog thing again? The dog thing is always a reference to obama oh right it's a running
Starting point is 00:42:10 guy right right right exactly i'll actually always remember watching that clip i was standing in ukraine 48 hours before the war began there well carlson then stood by putin consistently all the way through and that is why she was there to interview Zelensky. That's why she brought that up. She had that fawning interview with Zelensky. Before the war began, she was there? Yeah, to interview Zelensky. By coincidence?
Starting point is 00:42:35 I think not. Well, Carlson then stood by Putin consistently all the way through. And that is why he can go to Moscow now without... By the way, she said before the war begin, which was very odd. It would have been began. These are fair questions. And the answer to all of them is no. Vladimir Putin didn't do any of that.
Starting point is 00:42:57 I'll actually always remember watching that clip. I was standing in Ukraine 48 hours before the war begin there. Begin there. What is that? Begin there. What kind of language is begin there? She may be a newcomer, John. Before the war begin there. Then stood by Putin consistently all the way through. And that is why he can go to Moscow now without any fear of being summarily imprisoned. He's a hero. This was Putin's mouthpiece in the United States.
Starting point is 00:43:23 Somebody who had turned a blind eye to the atrocities committed by Putin because they were happening far away. Once vibrant towns turned to ruins, mass graves with dozens of bodies in the Kiev suburbs, a theater full of innocent women and children sheltering, bombed despite the giant world's children written on the roof. More than 200,000 Ukrainian soldiers killed or injured. written on the roof. More than 200,000 Ukrainian soldiers killed or injured. Dead, dead, he's a murderer. Putin is trying to seize on the fact that Zelensky's military appears to be in turmoil.
Starting point is 00:43:50 Yeah, okay. So of course Trump called up Vladimir and said, my boy's coming, this is great. We'll get your story out. Of course. It doesn't make Tucker a leader of the MAGA GOP. It makes... Well, that was...
Starting point is 00:44:05 I don't know what the word is. I have a clip from 2001 from NBC. One of their guys, I don't even know who this guy is, interviewing Putin before the war began. Begin. Begin. Beginning. Begin there.
Starting point is 00:44:23 Begin there. Before the wind, begin there. Yes. And this is the kind of interview, and then they just basically kept putting out of the picture after this interview. Let me just ask you a direct question. Did you order Alexei Navalny's assassination? Of course not.
Starting point is 00:44:40 We don't have this kind of habit of assassinating anybody. That's one. Number two is I want to ask you, did you order the assassination of the woman who walked into the Congress and who was shot and killed by a policeman? Do you know that 450 individuals were arrested after entering the Congress, and they didn't go there to steal a laptop? They came with political demands. 450 people have been detained. You're talking about a capital... They're looking at jail time between 15 and 25 years.
Starting point is 00:45:15 And they came to the Congress with political demands. Isn't that persecution for political opinions? Yeah, no. Persecution for political opinions. Yeah. But to me, to me, this is to get Trump elected. I mean, I was almost, I knew for sure, I knew it before it began, when we brought her out, there she is.
Starting point is 00:45:47 When you bring out Hillary to promote this, you know they want Trump to win. She wants everybody to watch. And she's she is literally using the literal same playbook about Trump as she did in 2016. I mean, he's like a puppy dog. You know, he somehow has after having been fired from so many outlets in the United States, I would not be surprised if he emerges with a contract with an outlet because he is a useful idiot. He says things that are not true. He parrots Vladimir Putin's pack of lies about Ukraine. So I don't see why Putin wouldn't give him an interview because through him he can continue to lie about what his objectives are in Ukraine and what he expects to see happen. who has, as I said, been fired so many times because he seems unable to correlate his reporting with the truth. But also because it's a sign that there are people in this country right now who are like a fifth column for Vladimir Putin. A fifth column? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:47:02 I mean, why are certain Republicans throwing their lot in? Why are, you know, other Americans basically believing Putin? Why did Trump believe Putin more than our 11 intelligence agencies? I don't know. Do you have a working theory? That's Alex Wagner, MSNBC. And she did a whole... Did Alex Wagner, and let me guess, did Alex Wagner say to Hillary that while she was Secretary of State that she managed to sell 20% of our uranium reserves to the Russians? Are you trying to be like sarcastic? Isn't that kind of like a good question? Because that seems like pro-Putin-ness. No, I think...
Starting point is 00:47:40 She's a Putin-ist. No, let's listen to the interview. It was fascinating. Were you surprised by... Remember, it is my belief that Hillary Clinton is doing this to get all the attention on Trump, focus everything on Trump.
Starting point is 00:47:54 Obviously, this is not going to sway any of the MAGA GOP, but it gets his name out there, and people sit at home and say, yeah, you know, I'm thinking about this. Were you surprised by their capitulation to Trump's whims on the border bill? I was surprised because it was a really serious effort. The Republicans have done this before.
Starting point is 00:48:13 Yes. You had a question. How can it be a serious effort when Schumer himself voted no? When I was in the Senate, we overwhelmingly passed an immigration reform, you know, in addition to security, other provisions as well. We passed it overwhelmingly in the Senate. Did they? Was there something? Oh, it was in the Senate, so it never passed. Then President George W. Bush said he would sign it and the Republican leadership in the House would never bring it up for a vote. So I've said for years they'd rather have a problem on the border than a solution. But I thought this time, given the seriousness of the negotiation,
Starting point is 00:48:52 the fact that it was only about security, that frankly, the Democrats gave up a lot to support the Republican request for greater security, which I favored, actually. And then at the last minute to have Donald Trump tell people who are independently elected in their states and have an obligation to represent their constituents and their conscience that they had to stop trying to solve the problem and go back to letting it fester for his own political. Did he call Schumer he must have called schumer hey chuck hey chuck man vote that we have any evidence that he called anybody of course not that's what's so beautiful purposes was pretty shocking to me and oh i'm sure right
Starting point is 00:49:37 there's no it wasn't even a surprise was it it's just kind of like trump's telling us we can't do it because it's not good for him in an election year. So we're not going to do it. This is so good with your Chuck Schumer revelation. He's like, Chuck Schumer said Trump told me not to do it, man. There were a few profiles in Courage for a little while. People standing up and saying, what are you talking about? We want to solve this problem. That's why we're sent to Washington.
Starting point is 00:50:01 But then they capitulated. And honestly, it shows a real danger that Trump poses where it doesn't matter whether you have a bipartisan agreement to solve a problem or not. If he wants it for political purposes, then he tries to and succeeds in blowing it up. That is what authoritarians do. And that's yet another reason why we can't let them anywhere near the White House again. Yeah, okay. So now I want to play this clip because I'm glad she's back. Yeah, and I disagree with your thesis
Starting point is 00:50:37 or hypothesis or whatever you want to call it now since we've got a bunch of people redefining these words. You don't think she's here to promote trump no oh she hates trump i don't believe that for a minute i think that in fact the line that she has which is trump's anti-democratic he's going to ruin the democracy she didn't say that in there no she said i think she's stupid i think she's an idiot and she's doing this she is promoting trump i'm not arguing that yeah that's my i don't think she means to okay well then she's doing this she is promoting trump i'm not arguing that yeah that's my i don't think she
Starting point is 00:51:05 means to okay well then she's stupid i'll i'll take stupid for 25 and we'll take it to the supreme court are you optimistic about what the supreme court does next i think on this particular issue this is about the colorado ballot uh the supreme court And I think they just heard oral arguments. If you watch TV today, they actually played them on Fox. I got to hear most of it. And it doesn't look good for Colorado, that's for sure. No, of course not. And remember that this is based upon some guy who's a psychologist who said,
Starting point is 00:51:44 no, Trump was thinking insurrection. Yes, I know. I know. It's some guy. Some guy was thinking. Good mind reader. Yes. If I were the Supreme Court, I wouldn't want to wade into this.
Starting point is 00:51:58 It's such a good opinion, I would deny cert. Let the opinion stand. Colorado, such a good opinion based upon the guy familiar with the former president's thinking. It's in line with previous opinions. You know, when Trump made the argument about, well, you know, this old hamstring future presidents. Well, he's the only one who has been in this position. And he is the only one who has claimed such broad blanket immunity. And we know what his real thoughts are.
Starting point is 00:52:27 Remember, I could shoot somebody on Fifth Avenue. No, no, wait, wait. This is important because now she gets into the persuasive arguments that are based on other things that Trump said. Broad blanket immunity. And we know what his real thoughts are. Remember, I could shoot somebody on Fifth Avenue. My supporters wouldn't care. He thinks nation based on the rule of law, not on the rule of individual men, the way that Trump keeps trying to claim.
Starting point is 00:53:11 All right. Did Trump ever say, to your knowledge, that he was going to use SEAL Team 6 to kill his political enemies? I can't find any reference to it, or I can't find a clip. No, because it wasn't him. It wasn't him that said this. I mean, as someone who ran for the presidency and won the popular vote, is it like, can you even wrap your head around arguing in court that you should be able
Starting point is 00:53:37 to kill your, assassinate your political enemies using SEAL Team 6? I mean, how did that argument land with you? Well, you know, he says so many outrageous things that I think a lot of people have stopped listening and they shouldn't. They should pay very careful attention to what Trump says. Now, just to remind ourselves where this was used, we go to Stephen Colbert, who for some unbelievable reason has Joy Reid on the show. It looks like, you know, all the safe money is on a Biden-Trump rematch here. Yeah. Besides the deja vu. Yes.
Starting point is 00:54:17 What is that like for you? Because some people aren't sure how to approach this differently this time. What is your approach to this election? Anything different than 2020? You know, the difference between that election and this one is that it was an up-in-the-air question. It was not an up-in-the-air question, I should say, in the previous election, whether the president of the United States could use SEAL Team 6 to kill his political opponents. So it's a little different now, right? It's a different Trump. Well, that was the argument that his
Starting point is 00:54:49 lawyers made. Yeah, his lawyers made that argument. He never said that. It was part of an argument, argumentation. So we go back to Hillary. Because if they do, they can see the linkage between what he says and what he tries to do. In his first term, on many occasions, he was reined in and even stopped by the people around him because there were people who he put into important positions, who had served in government under prior Republican presidents, who understood the rule of law, who understood the constitutional system and so much more. They were able to stop him. He will now fill those positions, if ever given a chance, which I hope never happens, with people who are...
Starting point is 00:55:34 I love how she says, he will now fill those positions, which I hope never happens. ...to stop him. He will now fill those positions... She knows he's going to win. There it is. She knows it already. It's a foregone conclusion in her mind. He will now fill those positions.
Starting point is 00:55:50 Well, knowing he's going to win doesn't mean she wants him to win. No, but that's why she says he will now fill those positions, and then she says, which we hope will never happen. He will now. And I agree that the writing's on the wall. Yes, let's just finish it. 30 seconds. He will now fill those positions, if ever given a chance, which I hope never happens with people who are totally members of his cult.
Starting point is 00:56:14 And I don't say that lightly or as a throwaway line. Because when I look at people who I know were horrified by January 6th, who are Republicans in the House and the Senate who have come around to dismissing it, to discounting the horror that they themselves felt as they, you know, put put themselves under desks as they ran down hallways, as they tried to escape the mob coming at them. There is something about Trump's hold on the Republican Party that is frightening. It's frightening. Thunderbolts of lightning. Here's a clip. This is the immunity. That was the thing about shooting your political opponents came out of the immunity argument.
Starting point is 00:57:03 Yes. This is from Democracy Now without Amy Goodman. OK, no, no, no warning. Shooting your political opponents came out of the immunity argument. Yes. This is from Democracy Now without Amy Goodman. Okay. No warning. I see it for a reason. Yes, thank you. No warning.
Starting point is 00:57:12 No warning needed. Trump immune kicker. In its ruling, the three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit wrote, quote, We cannot accept former President Trump's claim that a president has unbounded authority to commit crimes that would neutralize the most fundamental check on executive power, the recognition and implementation of election results. The judges went on to write, quote, Nor can we sanction his apparent contention that the executive has carte blanche to violate the rights of individual citizens to vote and to have their votes count. Trump has vowed to appeal the ruling, possibly to the Supreme Court. During oral arguments last month, Trump's legal team claimed the former president should have full immunity to do anything, even assassinate political opponents.
Starting point is 00:58:02 So let's keep that in play yes well so there is persuasion happening everywhere and i think trump is full-on he's got everybody out there including ice cube and yes i know and the reason why i say ice Cube, because I saw your clips, and I'm pretty sure I know what it's about. Your rappers lament. I just want to save everyone some embarrassment. We talked about this 12 years ago. This story that hip-hop, there was a secret music meeting, and the people who own the labels also own the prisons we're going to make hip-hop music we're going to make that uh gangster rap so we put all the black people in jail
Starting point is 00:58:52 the private jail so they can make money this is bullcrap it's not true and ice cube repeated this this is out there people are sending me this. I mean, if you want to play some of these clips, I'm happy to. But we have read this letter from this anonymous music industry executive verbatim on this show 12 years ago. It's been around forever. I've talked about it with Mo. There's no evidence of this. There's no evidence of these people owning the private prisons. So literally the same people?
Starting point is 00:59:48 Literally the same people who own the labels own private prisons. The records that come out are really geared to push people towards their prison industry. But they didn't make you write those lyrics. It's not about making somebody write the lyrics. It's about being there as guardrails to make sure certain songs make it through and certain songs don't. to make sure certain songs make it through and certain songs don't. This, to me, is somewhat, you know, some social engineering going on here
Starting point is 01:00:31 to make sure those prisons stay full. Do they actually, like, Monday, Tuesday, go to work as a record company executive and Wednesday through Friday go to work in the prisons? No, no, no. if of course they're not they're not actually running the labels they have they have financial interest they have financial interest ice cube is not stupid he's on the team this happened this this so-called secret meeting happened in 1991. And what happened, this is what you will hear next is, because this is going to be taken as fact.
Starting point is 01:01:09 Oh yeah, oh yeah. There was a secret meeting and this guy was there and it was in 1991. It was to get all the black people all riled up and get them to commit crimes and go to jail. And what happened in 1992? The Biden crime bill. You watch, that's next. This is a psy-op. It's an actual op to get black people to hate Joe Biden, to remind them of the 1992 crime bill. Well, you've proven my point. Yeah, that's exactly what's going on. And the crime bill thing, which they tried to bring out in the first election in 2020, it was a huge flop.
Starting point is 01:01:53 Yep. They couldn't get it to take hold. Couldn't get it. I mean, they could do a little bit of it during the Hillary election because she had called black criminals. I forgot if it was it wasn't the word vermin, but it was some horrible phrase that she had. I should know this for black criminals back in the day. Super predators, super predators, predator, super predators. I remember that. Yes. And. But that didn't catch either.
Starting point is 01:02:25 But this time it's possible that... I have her. Not just gangs of kids anymore. They are often the kinds of kids that are called super predators. No conscience, no empathy. We can talk about why they ended up that way, but first we have to bring them to heel. Yeah, you got to bring them to heel.
Starting point is 01:02:43 Yeah. Yeah. So this is. So the Democrats have got these issues, but they've been able to keep them under wraps. But using this as a two pronged approach, which is to reintroduce the gangster rap as a mechanism created for the private prisons. Yep. for the private prisons. And then follow it up with the crime bill and the commentary that Joe had back in the day,
Starting point is 01:03:09 which he doesn't remember, I'm sure. No, but it was good. It was good. It would be quite, just a good move. Yeah. And Ice Cube's on the team. There's no doubt. I mean, he knows.
Starting point is 01:03:23 He was making music in the 90s oh come on ice cube do you know that you know oh no they wouldn't they wouldn't put my records out unless it was about killing other black men no mo no no no i mean it's true today that the record labels uh encourage drill rap of course on sub labels so they can make money and, you know, then make it go big and push the Spotify algos. That's true. But this view, it may flop, but I think it's very strong because it came to you. It's been coming to me from, and it's like, hey, did you hear about this? You were on MTV. Did you know about this meeting? He said, no, fool.
Starting point is 01:04:06 No, of course not. Music business is bad, but they're not that bad that they're also running commercial prisons. No. It was the same people. We had a meeting. We had to sign a piece of paper. The funny thing is about the piece of paper story
Starting point is 01:04:26 which creates this problem is the one guy that's floating around now from the clips that i have uh he hasn't been in the music business for a while that piece of paper is valid because all it says in the piece of paper is that if you reveal this, you're going to get fired. Well, if you're not even working for that same company, you get fired from what? The minute you quit that job, you should go public. Yeah. But there's no one identified as the guy
Starting point is 01:04:55 who wrote that up. I mean, that thing's just been out there forever. As I said, 12, 14 years that story has been around. And and we we i think i read yeah we read it verbatim on the show so but that so there's a lot of a lot of things at work here and then you know we have uh we have war trying to make some war and um just to show you how uh how everyone before we venture off to the war oh okay then we're gonna pass over the three by three oh well let's do that now it's time for
Starting point is 01:05:33 three by three it is oh yeah comparing stories from abc cbs and mbc the never-ending we have the never-ending three by3 where we take a look at the headlines from the big news networks. Do they get Nat packages? Nat pops? John has it all. No, no, this is the one. This is about Trump's getting where they said, no, you don't get this kind of immunity you're looking for. Oh, okay. But this is the appeals court that does it. So it's going to go to the Supreme Court. It's not over yet. And they can't let this stand because in fact, despite the fact that the president could...
Starting point is 01:06:09 Immunity from insurrection, just immunity in general, immunity from what? Immunity from anything. If you commit a crime in office, you're immune from prosecution, but you're not immune from impeachment. The remedy, because the president has to do all kinds of things that could be seen from the outside world as illegal. That's very bad. Like killing Americans with drones, which Obama did. Thanks, Obama. And eating dogs, which Obama did. That could be illegal in some states. So he has to maintain it.
Starting point is 01:06:47 Because if this falls through, Obama could be, and every president probably, and this is what happens in Europe and elsewhere where they don't have this kind of immunity. The guy gets taken out of office, a new guy comes in. They immediately go after the old guy. They arrest him. Like, was it milosevic well not only him but everybody in south america yeah who's ever been a leader there has been arrested there's the fact that leader current leader of brazil was you know got elected after being in prison i mean it's just unbelievable so you can't you have to have this
Starting point is 01:07:24 kind of thing and then if if it goes too far if the guy's really a, you know, if he does shoot his political opponent, he gets impeached. You impeach him. And it's not that hard to do. So that's what you're supposed to do. So they, and I would say George Bush could be a war criminal. Could be. Could be. Could be. No problem.
Starting point is 01:07:46 Yeah. So here we go with that. But it got rejected at the lower courts. It's going to go up. But the point of the three by three is to compare the coverage. So let's start with ABC and Pierre Thomas. Tonight, in a scathing opinion of federal appeals court rejecting Donald Trump's claims, he has complete immunity from prosecution for anything he did as president,
Starting point is 01:08:07 including his efforts to overturn the 2020 election. The three-judge panel unanimously ruling, former President Trump has become Citizen Trump. Any executive immunity that may have protected him while he served as president no longer protects him against this prosecution. We cannot accept that the office of the presidency places its former occupants above the law for all time thereafter. Trump claims he cannot be tried for trying to overturn the election and his actions leading up to January 6th.
Starting point is 01:08:36 The president has to have immunity. In court in January, the judge is deeply skeptical, asking if a president could order the assassination of his opponent and get away with it. Trump's lawyer arguing a president can't be charged unless he is first impeached and convicted by Congress. Could a president who ordered SEAL Team 6 to assassinate a political rival who was not impeached, would he be subject to criminal prosecution? If he were impeached and convicted first. So your answer is no.
Starting point is 01:09:08 Today, the court was blunt. We cannot accept former President Trump's claim that the remain in power despite losing the 2020 election were, if proven, an unprecedented assault on the structure of our government. Trump has until Monday to appeal to the Supreme Court. If the high court declines the appeal, the judge overseeing the case could set a new trial date soon. But if the Supreme Court decides to consider the matter, all bets are off, David. There could be lengthy delays. I'm very excited to see how NBC and CBS handled this. Did they have the same quote, the same SEAL Team 6 quote?
Starting point is 01:09:53 Well, the thing about, you know, you can shoot your political opponent still cracks me up. It's great. Because they keep using it and everyone's using it as leverage because he wants to be dictator from day one. Oh, no, only on day one. No, no, but that's not the way it's being presented from day one from day one yes not only on day one okay let's go to uh that was what abc let's go to nbc former president donald trump today dubbed citizen trump by a three-judge panel in washington ruling mr trump is not immune from prosecution. The court saying we cannot accept that the office of the presidency places its former occupants above the law for all time thereafter.
Starting point is 01:10:33 But wait a minute. He was president when when this when this took place. So they're they're arguing. They're confusing the matter. They're arguing about something which, of course, is true. Well, if you're no longer president, that's not what they argued in court. But the, they're confusing the matter. They're arguing about something which, of course, is true if you're no longer president. That's not what they argued in court, but the networks are arguing it. To make it appear as though, okay, I was president, so now from there on I'm immune from everything.
Starting point is 01:10:57 That's not what the case is about, but that's what the network wants you to think. And it's not true. The Trump campaign saying he'll appeal the decision. I like how they keep saying citizen Trump. Trump himself bemoaning the ruling, saying a president of the United States must have full immunity in order to properly function and do what. They should have used our word lamenting. But they but they said bemoaning, bemoaning. But they said bemoaning, bemoaning, self bemoaning the ruling, saying a president of the United States must have full immunity in order to properly function and do what has to be done for the good of our country.
Starting point is 01:11:41 Special Counsel Jack Smith charged Mr. Trump last summer for his efforts to reverse the 2020 election results and stop the peaceful transfer of power. We will never give up. We will never concede. We will never give up. We will never concede. Trump's claim that a president has unbounded authority to commit crimes that would neutralize the most fundamental check on executive power, the recognition and implementation of election results. The Trump campaign capitalizing on the court's decision today with a fundraising plea as a Republican frontrunner frequently uses his legal setbacks as fuel for his latest White House bid. If you have a president that doesn't have immunity, he's never going to be free to do anything because the opposing party will always indict him as soon as he leaves the White House. With today's ruling, Mr. Trump's only hope at avoiding trial is for the Supreme Court to find he is immune, which would have major implications in the other legal cases he faces as well.
Starting point is 01:12:44 What are the next steps? What's the timeline ahead? Well, Lester, the court today said Mr. Trump has just until Monday to appeal this to the U.S. Supreme Court. Now, it's unclear if the justices there will even take up the case, but if they choose not to, this trial could happen as early as this summer, Lester. So what do you think? I mean... Well, first of all,c did not drop the bomb about they didn't put it in there shooting your political opponent what's wrong with them sorry what's wrong with them that's the best that's the best i know and nbc is the most
Starting point is 01:13:16 anti-trump of the network yeah they had it on msnbc with hillary they let her put it in there they should have put it in yeah so I'm baffled by that particular coverage. It was a very, it was light. It was lightweight. Let's go to CBS and see what Jan Crawford has to say. The ruling by the influential D.C.-based Federal Appeals Court was a stern rebuke of the former
Starting point is 01:13:38 president's sweeping claims about immunity from prosecution, with the court saying the former president must face trial for efforts to subvert the 2020 election. For the purpose of this criminal case, former President Trump has become citizen Trump, with all the defenses of any other criminal defendant. In court and on the campaign trail, Donald Trump repeatedly says he can't be prosecuted for his actions as president. A president has to be given immunity, and this has nothing to do with me.
Starting point is 01:14:07 But the three-judge panel of two Democratic appointees and one Republican was unanimous and emphatic. Any executive immunity that may have protected him while he served as president no longer protects him against this prosecution. The bounds of Trump's immunity arguments became clear last month. While he sat in the front row of a packed courtroom, one of the judges presented his lawyer with a dramatic hypothetical. I asked you a yes or no question. Could a president who ordered SEAL Team 6 to assassinate a political rival who was not impeached, would he be subject to criminal prosecution?
Starting point is 01:14:46 If he were impeached and convicted first. Since the Senate declined to convict Trump, that argument would mean special counsel Jack Smith couldn't either. Hold on a second. Now that I think about it, it was actually the judge who came up with the hypothetical, not Trump's lawyers. Let me listen to it again. Everybody says it's Trump's lawyers who came up with the hypothetical lawyers let me listen to it again it is everybody says it's trump's
Starting point is 01:15:07 lawyers that came up with the hypothetical let me listen let me listen with a dramatic hypothetical while he sat in the front row of a packed courtroom one of the judges presented his lawyer with a dramatic hypothetical wow oh wow not only did Trump not say it, someone who hates Trump said it. That's great. I asked you a yes or yes or no question. Could a president who ordered Steel Team six to assassinate a political rival who was not impeached? He'd be subject to criminal prosecution. You should never answer a hypothetical. If he were impeached and convicted first. Since the Senate declined to convict Trump, that argument would mean special counsel Jack Smith couldn't either. And the appeals court flatly rejected it.
Starting point is 01:15:53 So that was clearly a talking point that a lot of people agreed upon. They must have had a meeting about that. Oh, judge, you've got to ask this question we'll all use it for years and jan crawford is here with us and so is cbs news chief election and campaign correspondent robert costa good to have both of you here for more context and analysis so jan this is not the end of this right oh no it's not i mean he can ask the full court of appeals to reconsider this or he can skip that step and just go straight to the Supreme Court. But having lost it every turn, I mean, I think that is a long shot. I don't see how he's going to get five votes from the Supreme Court if they decide to take up this case. And if they do,
Starting point is 01:16:35 I still think we're looking at a trial, possibly late spring or early summer. Oh, well, I think the Supreme Court will punt on this one. They don't want to deal with that. I disagree. You think they're going to take it? I think they'll take it, but it'll go on the docket. It won't be heard forever. No, but it would be more fun because during the summer months, we need some TV action.
Starting point is 01:17:01 Everything's on hiatus. I'm just thinking from a logical perspective. Nobody's watching TV during the summer. That's the problem.. I'm just thinking from a logical perspective. Yeah, but nobody's watching TV during the summer. That's the problem. Well, we'll have something to watch. It's free content. It's free. For us. Alright.
Starting point is 01:17:15 Let's go to the CBC. Canada. They got a report. USA! USA! USA! For what happened on January 6th, when a mob stormed the U.S. Capitol to overturn the 2020 presidential election results, Donald Trump can face prosecution. That according to a unanimous and scathing ruling from a three-judge federal appeals panel. They wrote, We cannot accept former President Donald Trump's claim that a president has unbounded authority to commit crimes.
Starting point is 01:17:49 It's a total rejection of Trump's claims that his actions on that day are protected by presidential immunity. On social media, Trump railed against the ruling, calling it dangerous. He wrote, a president of the United States must have full immunity in order to properly function. During proceedings, that line of argument was repeatedly challenged by the three-judge panel, including Judge Karen LeCraft Henderson. I think it's paradoxical to say that his constitutional duty to take care that the laws be faithfully executed allows him to violate criminal laws. Today's ruling is unprecedented, largely because no former American president has ever faced criminal charges. In Washington, Trump supporters once again blame the former president's legal troubles on political bias. Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson.
Starting point is 01:18:46 I believe that they've been after President Trump for partisan political purposes. I think that's obvious. And we call it lawfare. And I think there's no other way to describe it. From Trump loyalist representative Matt Gaetz. We are here today to authoritatively express that President Trump did not commit an insurrection. Trump's team has until February 12 to file an appeal to the Supreme Court, and what the court decides could have an effect on whether
Starting point is 01:19:11 the issue is settled before or after the November election. Right, all right. The sad thing about this is, is it has destroyed all faith in the American justice system. I would hate to be sued. I'd hate to be charged for anything. You've got no chance. It's all corrupt. I know I'm not. Am I, am I stating the obvious here?
Starting point is 01:19:38 Well, I don't know if it's as bad as you make it out to be. Well, yeah, I would say at the highest levels. Yes. Yeah yeah but not necessarily locally but unless some nut job says you raped her at bergdorf goodman and they and they say well you know you didn't rape her but you defamed her
Starting point is 01:19:58 83 million dollars 83 million dollars you know it's like no i think there's loss well the real problem is that the cost of these defenses is just ridiculous he's going broke doing these things i mean i mean imagine that you know the government refinance the government sues me for for denying the moon landing. Things are so bad that even Trudeau is telling the Scandinavians they don't want to be like Trump. Mr. Speaker, what we hear from the leader of the opposition is under the previous conservative government, everything was perfect, and what he is proposing to do is to make Canada great again. That is not what Canadians want.
Starting point is 01:20:48 He is fighting for a nostalgia that, quite frankly, Canadians do not feel. Don't make Canada great again. No, no. That's not what Canadians want. No, they don't want it to be great again at all all right so we have um the we have the the democrats in this grand theatrical game which i don't even know how many people are really that interested in but it is good for us to just pull it apart we have the republicans the democrats are saying oh it's trump's fault this war and now we have lindsey graham i mean the uh for the border lindsey graham is now going to put his ugly little fat fingers into the war business and that that you know they're doing
Starting point is 01:21:36 it all wrong and uh and and you know it would have been better if trump were in office i mean the whole thing is just disgusting. Our national security is in free fall. Morgan Ortega has made a very good point. Look at the record for the last three years. This is a symptom of a greater problem. We withdrew from Afghanistan. The Taliban took over in 2021.
Starting point is 01:22:00 Showing weakness, Putin invades Ukraine in 2022. In 2023, Hamas attacks Israel, killing more Jews than any time since the Holocaust. 2024, we're having Americans killed by Iranian proxies in the Mideast. They're pushing us all over the Holocaust. 2024, we're having Americans killed by Iranian proxies in the Mideast. They're pushing us all over the place. Our national security's in free fall. Mideast? Here's what works. Hit something they value.
Starting point is 01:22:35 Soleimani was killed with a single strike. He was their General Patton in Eisenhower. There was nothing left but a smoldering car and a ring finger. Woo! Yeah! Ring finger! It worked. They got back in a box. There was nothing left but a smoldering car and a ring finger. Woo! Yeah! Ring finger!
Starting point is 01:22:47 It worked. They got back in a box. Here's what we need to do. You need to hit something the Ayatollah values. His leadership team, like a soul of money, are taking out the oil business. If we hit their oil infrastructure, you don't need manned aircraft. They've got four refineries you can see from space. If you knock one of them out, they would stop this. Our American troops are in harm's way.
Starting point is 01:23:15 If the goal is to deter Iran, you're failing miserably. They got the message. What they're not afraid of us. They were afraid of Trump. They're not afraid of us. It is not working. We need to change our policy. People are not afraid of us. This idea of hitting hundreds of targets doesn't matter. The only Iranian we killed in Syria, Iraq, is some dumbass that doesn't know to get out of the way. We gave them a week's notice. So if there are another round of strikes coming, I hope they really will hurt Iran in their pocketbook or kill their leadership, because if you don't, nothing changes. The guy who literally told Mark Zuckerberg he had blood on his hands is saying, hey, kill some people. Kill some people that matter.
Starting point is 01:23:54 Kill some people that matter. Blow some stuff up. But I think he's right. These so-called strikes that we're doing, it's just, if anything, it's just to legitimize that we're in Jordan where we shouldn't be in the first place. Or Syria. No, we can be in Jordan. Not in Syria. Syria.
Starting point is 01:24:14 Yeah, Syria. Now, if we go back to a clip, I remind people that we had, I don't have the clip in front of me, but we had this clip of one of our analysts going on that this whole thing is a scam because we're in bed with Iran. Yes. Do you remember the name of that clip? No. You know, I'm going to have to try to dig it up. The claim was that we're in bed with Iran. The whole thing's phony.
Starting point is 01:24:38 That's why we don't want to get into a war with or even get pushed into one. And they don't want one either because we know we're all doing this for more oil to get into the market yep the market is flooded with oil uh biden has done just the opposite of what he said he was going to do but he can't talk about it or brag about it because his base you know is all against fossil fuels but again all you have to do is go to the american petroleum institute or else, and you'll find that we've been pumping more oil here domestically and internationally than ever before. The market has got lots of oil. I think this is all, even the Red Sea, it's all about control of oil. All of it.
Starting point is 01:25:21 Which has been kind of a thesis of the show. Yeah. Since the pipeline episode. Pipelines, oil. The pipeline episode. Yep. 118 or something. It was way back. 180, yeah.
Starting point is 01:25:40 Well, I want to play some clips from Al Jazeera about this war because they brought on an Iranian professor at the University of Tehran. And he brings in some points that we've made on the show. The guy's glib and he's a dick. And he smirks when other people are talking, especially the American representative, representing the American side of the argument. He's, oh, yeah, sure. You can just see it in his eyes.
Starting point is 01:26:04 And he's got, but he's got some things to say that i think are interesting enough that our our group here should be aware of or be reminded of mostly let's go with this uh clip one let's bring in our guests for today's discussion from tehran we're joined by muhammad mar, a political analyst and professor at the University of Tehran. From London, Reynald Mansour, Senior Research Fellow and Director of the Iraq Initiative at Chatham House, a British think tank. And from Washington, D.C., Lawrence Coyle, Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress and former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense. Gentlemen, welcome to you all. Mohamed Marandi, Professor, how dangerous a moment is this for
Starting point is 01:26:48 the region? Will these strikes be the last? The United States is only digging itself into a deeper hole. The United States is illegally occupying one-third of Syria. The United States keeps its military bases in Iraq, despite the fact that the Iraqi parliament has told them to leave. They struck bases that are linked to the Iraqi military, that belong to the Iraqi military. The Iraqis condemned the attack, and the same is true with Syria. Biden wants to look strong. He hasn't attacked Iranians. And most importantly, is the fact that, the Palestinians, and the Iraqis, and the Syrians.
Starting point is 01:27:46 But they're just misleading public opinion, and they're fooling themselves. People don't like their countries to be occupied. Okay, you could also argue, Professor, that Iran is occupying parts of Syria, Iraq, and Lebanon, couldn't you? You know, of course this guy is going to be right, I'm sure. But I always feel bad when we do the show and like, we're the bad guys. We're just douches. I mean, we're occupying everybody's, I mean, I know we've been saying it for 16 years. Because it's been true.
Starting point is 01:28:22 Because it's been true. But I just feel bad about it. Let's stop. That is the one thing that I really, really liked about Trump. Just, you know, let's not do that. Let's just do our own thing over here. Let's not do that. Yeah, he had all kinds of back deals and backroom deals with everybody.
Starting point is 01:28:39 Well, the backroom stuff, the back channeling is what, and they bring it out in this commentary, because the guy who is not the Chatham House guy really doesn't say much, which is kind of remarkable in itself, since they always have something to say that's propagandistic. Chatham House is an interesting operation. It's kind of like the CFR. We have Chatham House rules where anything we say can't be talked about. Yeah, that kind of thing.
Starting point is 01:29:08 But the other guy, the American ex, I think he's a DO, Defense Department guy. He brings up some interesting points. And I think that, and they're in these clips where what is on the surface is bull crap. Because most of the back channeling is just the opposite of what we're hearing. And he calls out this Iranian guy a couple of times, but let's go with clip two. No, Iran doesn't have any forces in Iraq. And Iran's role in Syria is with the consent of the internationally recognized government in Damascus. And in any case... But it has proxy, it does have proxy militias though, doesn't it?
Starting point is 01:29:52 No, whatever Iran does in Syria, it is with the consent and support of the government. Iran helps defeat ISIS and Al-Qaeda. Remember, on February the 12th, 2012, Jake Sullivan, the now U.S. National Security Advisor, sent an email to Hillary Clinton, who was the Secretary of State, saying that in Syria, al-Qaeda is on our side. ISIS came from al-Qaeda. The U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency document of 2012 said that the U.S. allies in the region wanted to establish a Salafist entity between Iraq and Syria. And then the General Michael Flynn, who was the head of that agency at the time, said in an interview on Al Jazeera that the U.S. took a will... Wait, wait, wait. Did he say Michael Flynn?
Starting point is 01:30:41 To establish a Salafist entity between Iraq and Syria. And then the General Michael Flynn, who was the head of that agency at the time, said in an interview on Al Jazeera that the U.S. took a willful decision to support the establishment of that Salafist entity. That was ISIS. So the Iranians, when the U.S. and its allies were establishing ISIS and al-Qaeda and their affiliates, the Iranians were helping the Syrians and the Iraqis to prevent ISIS from taking over Damascus and Baghdad. Right. So let's just agree on one thing. This is not because we hate anybody that lives in the sand. It's because there's oil in the sand.
Starting point is 01:31:27 And we have the military industrial complex, which employs it. It's our business. Yeah. I mean, that's, that's, that's, that's,
Starting point is 01:31:32 that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, we need it. Our business is oil. Our business is war.
Starting point is 01:31:36 Well, the war is just, the war is more a function of making sure that oil keeps flowing. I love how some of the troll room are saying, speak for yourself, Curry. I'm not an American. I don't agree with those crooks in Washington. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you can't walk away from it.
Starting point is 01:31:55 Crooks in Washington. Go vote. That'll change things. Renato Massua in London, what do you make of what you just heard? Well, I think, I mean, it's important to kind of nuance some of this history. The Americans were also invited to Iraq in 2014 by the Iraqi government to support in the fight against ISIS. So at that time and during the fight against ISIS, the Americans and the Iranians had a common enemy
Starting point is 01:32:25 and they fought, you know, not on the same side by side, but with the common end. Yes. After ISIS, we're living in this sort of post ISIS arena, this region where now they're sort of turned on each other. And this is the latest of this escalation. So both Iran and the U.S. have significant influence across these countries. The U.S. does have troops in Iraq and Syria. And Iran, of course, has, you know, I agree that calling them proxies takes the agency away from these groups, but they are aligned and they do work together. And these are networks that span across Yemen, Lebanon, Syria and Iraq, pursuing at times Iran's foreign policy goals. So this is a very dangerous, I think, you know, some are calling it tinderbox right now, where neither the Iranians nor the Americans want an all out war or a direct conflict. But what we're seeing is this tit-for-tat show of force that's making the region very dangerous. Oh, the region.
Starting point is 01:33:29 Thank God we're back in the region. The region is great. You know what's in the region? Our oil under their sand is in the region. That's exactly right. And I think that's brought up in the next clip. Lawrence Korb, do you want to come back on anything that you've heard so far before I put a direct question to you? Yeah, I think it's important to keep in mind that we left
Starting point is 01:33:50 Iraq in 2011. In fact, I talked to Maliki about staying. Basically, we came back in 2014 at their invitation because of what ISIS was doing. And basically, that has been our role. Before October 7th, we were carrying this out. We were talking to the Iraqis about leaving. Sometimes they say something publicly, but privately, no, they still wanted us to say. But after October 7th, you had over 160 attacks on the American forces there in Iraq and Syria. Fortunately, no one was killed. So our response was not overwhelming or as strong as it has been when the Americans died.
Starting point is 01:34:40 And that's where we are right now. And my experience with the Iraqis, a lot of times they'll say something publicly to appease the Iranians, but then privately they'll say, no, no, we really still want you to stay. You know what I'm missing? I'm missing shots of people saying death to America. They need to get that going again. Honestly, I would really like to have those guys in the orange jumpsuits beheading people again, because that was some good video they were producing. Yeah, I think they
Starting point is 01:35:14 got it. That was good stuff. It was more entertaining than what we're getting, that's for sure. These are kind of dry, and it's kind of academic. In fact, these clips are very much that way. I know, but it's still good stuff.
Starting point is 01:35:28 It's a good reminder because this goes back 10, 10 years, eight years. All of this stuff is just, nothing has changed. They're just rehashing, rehashing. This is five.
Starting point is 01:35:40 Yeah, let's get it. It's the last one, right? Yeah, it's the last one. No, it's six.
Starting point is 01:35:44 There's six. Oh, yes. I'm sorry. It's the last one, right? Yeah, it's the last one. No, there's six. There's six. Oh, yes. I'm sorry. Six. Mohamed Morandi, U.S. National Security Spokesman John Kirby said that the goal is to get the attacks on U.S. interests to stop. We're not, he said, quote, looking for a war with Iran. Now, no targets were hit within Iran in these retaliatory strikes. How will Iran and its proxies respond? Will it reign these groups in as Lawrence said the U.S. wants it to? Let's be clear. Contrary to what your guest in the United States says, these are not proxies. And the real issue here is the
Starting point is 01:36:22 genocide in Gaza. I have no doubt about it. And the United States, as we speak, is preparing the Israeli regime for an expansion in Lebanon. So in the coming weeks, we may have heavy fighting in southern Lebanon. The United States is not retaliating in Syria. The United States is an illegal occupation force in Syria. In the Al-Tanf area where attack Syrian government forces. And in the last couple of months, they carried out two major attacks, in each case killing between 15 to 20 conscripts, soldiers on buses, and I think on both occasions. So the United States, its presence in Syria is illegal. It is stealing Syrian oil in the east of the country and exporting it. No. In Iraq, the United States has bombed Iraqi military positions. It has destroyed Iraqi facilities that were constructed
Starting point is 01:37:35 and paid for by the Iraqi government. This is the reality on the ground. Nothing will change that. Okay. So the one thing I'd like to understand is who and how are we pumping the oil out of Syria? I don't know. What company? That's a crazy accusation, but it's the only thing that explains our presence in Syria. But who, what company, who is, I know there's pipelines everywhere, but who is really pumping it out? Well, that we need to find out. Because that's a blockbuster.
Starting point is 01:38:08 Yeah. But that, to me, I've never heard that before. That we're stealing Syrian oil. And Syria's never been known as an oil producer. But they're in that same region. They probably have oil here and there. They're in the region. They're in the region. They're in the region.
Starting point is 01:38:28 Soaking with oil. It's soaked. It's northeast Syria, I think. It's where the oil is. Hasakah. It's northeast. Was it anywhere near a port? He's pumping it right to the port and shipping it out in tankers.
Starting point is 01:38:50 This comes back to the kurds probably it's probably very cheap to get it there oh it's got to be dirty sure conoco conoco conoco conoco yeah who owns conoco who's that it's an offshoot of standard oil of new york yeah there you go it makes sense it's a stand it's a oh it's a spininoff from years ago. Is this all because... The grand game is you try to hamper Russia's oil, which to some degree, of course, did work, even though no. No.
Starting point is 01:39:17 But for some stuff, it didn't help. I'll tell you what fascinates me is that they've managed to keep the cost of oil over $70 a barrel by creating what seems to be a shortage while pumping more than ever before. The price of oil right now to the American public, to the consumer, especially the gasoline price, should be back to the Trump era. And it shouldn't be $ 75 a barrel or whatever it is it's in the 70s and goes and floats between 72 and 80 to 90 well isn't it just mark just phony down to the 50s
Starting point is 01:39:53 isn't it just phony markets and markets are also based on sentiment and news stories and i think absolutely and so they they give you the impression that, you know, and we're cutting down with no more fossil fuels. And the whole bull crap that they're promoting is doing nothing but benefiting the big oil companies. Again, I would tell people to take a look at this chart for ExxonMobil from the day Biden got elected to today. If you would have put your money into ExxonMobil right at the day you got elected, I think you would have tripled your money by now. So this is so scam-ish, it's embarrassing. Same for Meta. Meta.
Starting point is 01:40:35 So let's go with... Put my money in Meta. Actually, that tripled. Quadrupled. Quadrupled. Went from under $100 to $400. Yeah, it went from $ from 96 to 400 pretty quickly. So let's go to clip six.
Starting point is 01:40:50 And I should also add that the United States, after the assassination of the Iraqi commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, alongside General Qasem Soleimani, alongside General Qasem Soleimani. At the Iraqi International Airport over four years ago, Iraqi parliament demanded that the United States leave, and they never did. They said they'd leave, but the United States has one strong card to play with, and that is that all of Iraqi oil that is sold, the money goes to accounts in the United States.
Starting point is 01:41:24 And whenever the Iraqi government goes too far, the Americans start withholding Iraqi funds and creating a crisis in Iraq. So the Americans are like the godfather. They stand back, they pretend they're the good guys. But just like in Gaza, where they are part of this genocide, And here they played the same role. Remember, the United States and Iraq, they helped Saddam Hussein. The West gave Saddam Hussein chemical weapons. The U.S. fought alongside Saddam Hussein against Iran in 1988, striking Iranian ships. And then it turned against Iraq.
Starting point is 01:42:00 Later on, it invaded Iraq. Who created this mess? It was the United States. Don't even talk about Libya and Gaddafi. We really did a number on him. We did a number on him. For sure. Well, so
Starting point is 01:42:16 I'll follow that up. I have a Lester Holt interview short here, two short clips, with the ambassador to the UN Iran's ambassador to the UN let's see if we can get some clarification on the big theater from him I spoke to ambassador Amir Saeed Irvani just days after three U.S. soldiers died in a drone attack and with ongoing strikes on commercial ships in the Red Sea the U.S. blaming Iranian-backed militias. Much of the conversation centers on the level of control or influence that you and the Iranian government has over these groups, the Houthis and other groups. If you pick up the phone,
Starting point is 01:42:57 can you end the attacks? No. May I say that it is not the same case. The relation between Iran and the resistance group in this region may be compared with the NATO territory. So you're calling this like a defense pact? Yeah, defense pact between the resistance group and Iran. They have their own decision. They have their own choices. It is not related to a phone call to the Houthis. Houthi attacks that we've seen on commercial shipping, sophisticated weapons. Is Iran supplying those weapons? Not at all.
Starting point is 01:43:34 Would Iran prefer that the Houthi attacks against commercial shipping, threatening U.S. naval vessels, do you wish those would stop? Are they helpful? No, we encourage all of them to stop. You're encouraging them to stop. We encourage them to stop. We expect that the other side also should encourage the Israelis to stop.
Starting point is 01:43:57 We got to a stop. A stop at all. A stop at all. You know, I always have to think of Lex's wife wife for eba says everyone in iran everyone knows america and iran are working together everybody knows it over there on friday the u.s began what's expected to be a wave of attacks in response to the deaths of those american soldiers if there is an american attack on iran or iranian interests what do you foresee the reaction would be oh we break out the party a second he's doing the
Starting point is 01:44:32 interview still right yeah yeah so they cut away to it's like a what is this the family guy show yeah so they cut away to some nat pops and explosions yes yes, yes, yes. Oh, please. And then he said, hey, if we attacked you, what would your reaction be? A one of joy, of course. You know that. Absolutely, Iran, we have their own reaction. We said clearly that if they attack in Iran soil or Iran benefit or Iran individuals all around the world, we have their own reaction. We will defend, absolutely. And I asked about news Hamas has responded to an offer for a hostage deal.
Starting point is 01:45:15 There's been a response from the opposition, but, yes, I'm we're from Hamas but it seems to be a little over the top we're not sure where it is how do you view the fact that a deal may come about soon I think that if the other side accepts the
Starting point is 01:45:40 condition of the Hamas the ceasefire is possible. A lasting one? A lasting one. Oh, plate. Theater. Theater. And by the way, they don't care who dies.
Starting point is 01:45:53 They don't care who dies on the streets of America. They don't care who dies in Gaza. No one cares. We are dispensable human resources. Best to stay away. I mean, the hostages, they say 30% of them are dead. They must be dead by now. No, they said at least 30 of the 150 are already dead.
Starting point is 01:46:12 Yeah. The 150 left that they haven't passed on, passed back. And, you know, I don't think they want to know. I don't think they're ever going to bring this to a conclusion because they don't want to find out they're all dead. Yeah. Also, the minute that happens, then Bibi Netanyahu gets kicked out. He'll be gone.
Starting point is 01:46:33 Everybody hates him. So they need that ongoing conflict. Genocide. Well, it has to go on for a while. So I'm going to move to something else a little less depressing there was this uh headline which kind of reminded me of the swift op biden camp reportedly fears photos from special counsel classified documents probe could devastate re-election bid i immediately thought huh there it is there's your ai fake photo uh
Starting point is 01:47:08 swift up oh special counsel right we're being set up for yep being set up for fake photos fake photos now it's going to be a real photo they're going to say is fake yes or is it a fake photo they're going to say is fake they're going gonna say it's fake whatever it doesn't matter it doesn't matter either way is good special counsel robert her could release report in biden classified docs case as soon as this week but what would be so embarrassing just picture i mean just stuff thrown about or i mean haven't we already seen it in his garage wasn't that embarrassing enough no it's got to be something else got to be something i did to be good it has to be sexual yeah like taking showers with his daughter well they're not gonna have any photos of that but uh and i don't know what it could be we'll find out soon enough because you know it's going to
Starting point is 01:48:02 come out if they if although do you remember this this isn't always interested me do you remember the abu grab scandal with oh yeah oh yeah the little dominatrix girl with the whip and she's beating guys and they're naked and they're a pile of naked guys there's all these wires hooked up to them the wires hooked up and they're in you know with a black hood and all the rest of it yeah uh and they made the comment and i think it was either schumer or somebody in congress says well you know people are gonna have to get ready because that's not even the worst of it the worst is to come and we never saw anything after that no never saw it. Never saw it. No, never saw it. So you have to wonder.
Starting point is 01:48:51 In fact, right now, the latest is, and I don't think I have any clips about it, but the concept that, I'll have it for the next show. Jeremy Scafee or whatever his name is. Scahill. Is it Scahill? Yeah. It's on is it scahill yeah it's on democracy now claims that they've done the research and shows that the entire situation in uh gaza versus iraq is all bogus and he's got all kinds of documentation for it and i i have commentary but uh i have to i have to or it's
Starting point is 01:49:20 too long and when it's long blah blah blah things i gotta cut it way down yeah it could be way down. It's going to take me a lot of time. Could be a little shorter than The Professor, just one clip shorter. Six, six clips is long. Well, you know, The Professor, I didn't like it being this long. I did cut a lot out because it was more than just The Professor, but I liked what The Professor had to say, even though he was a dick. So, climate change, a couple of things happening. One is that Mark, what's his name well i have i have the intro clip before you start on climate change the mark stein thing do you have that no no i have an intro clip just to get you in the mood okay what is it what is the this is the california floods
Starting point is 01:49:59 uh democracy now report because you know the Now, they get to the bottom of things. Is it Amy? No, it's not Amy. It's Namina or whatever her name is, the homely woman. In California, at least nine people have died as the state continues to be pummeled with record-breaking rainfall from a deadly atmospheric river storm. Some areas of Southern California recorded over 13 inches of rain in recent days, triggering mass flooding and hundreds of mudslides. This is the actor and filmmaker Deborah Puitt speaking in Studio City as a river of water flowed down the street. These record highs in the summertime and then these incredible storms that we've never had before that they're calling, you know, once every 100-year storms, and we've had two of them since August.
Starting point is 01:50:49 So that's my belief is, of course, it's climate change. Of course, it's climate change. How is it there, John? How are the mudflats? How's everything looking over there? It's beautiful out right now. It's sunny. A few clouds in the sky.
Starting point is 01:51:00 It's nice. It's a little cold. It was 41 last night. It was really cold. Yeah. But there's no rain. clouds in the sky it's nice it's a little cold it was 41 last night it was really cold yeah but uh there's no rain it hasn't rained for a couple or rained a little bit yesterday and it's gonna be now the other day on sunday we had you had wind there was that the once in 100 years storm that you had well we've had this we anytime there's wind from the south it's a it's a nuisance it's
Starting point is 01:51:23 blowing stuff over but that wasn't my question have you had two two ones in 100 years okay every hundred years and of course that's because of climate change no there's a court case right now i think it's in man by the way why would you automatically go to that why do you you have to be brainwashed. If, say, climate change was never discussed or even thought of, would you automatically think climate change because it's rained a little bit in Los Angeles? It rains there all the time. When it rains in L.A. and fills up that culvert called Los Angeles River, which is a cement thing they build just for overflow, and it's filled.
Starting point is 01:52:04 As a kid, I remember it getting filled, and it gets filled every decade. Well, yes. The answer is yes. Trillions of dollars have been spent for the past 40 years on psychologically telling people, manipulating people into believing that climate change is killing us. I heard a guy I know pretty well just the other day. He lives in Australia.
Starting point is 01:52:28 He says, oh, it's 85 degrees here. Well, it's climate change. And we're burning up again in Australia. It's climate change. Yeah, and it's just, you know, we used to say, well, it's Indian summer. Well, it's hot or whatever we'd say. It's hot. It's hot.
Starting point is 01:52:43 That's what we used to say. It's hot. It's hot. That's what we used to say. It's hot. I remember in the 70s going back to visit from Holland and we were in, I'm going to say maybe we're in New England and hanging out and, you know, the tar was melting on the street. And I remember it was hot. I remember cooking an egg in Vegas for a TV show in 1990. It was hot.
Starting point is 01:53:04 You know, it's not any hotter. Anyway. It gets hot every year. So Mark Stein, remember him, Mark Stein? Mark Stein, yeah, he used to be a substitute for Mark Levin, but too many Marks. And he used to be on Tucker. He used to be on a lot. He used
Starting point is 01:53:20 to be on all the Fox and radio shows, all the radio shows. I think he even took a Rush Limbaugh seat a couple of times. Yes. So he is in to be on all the fox and radio shows all the radio shows i think he even took a uh a brush limbaugh seat a couple of times yes uh so he is uh in a lawsuit right now it's a civil suit and it's being um a defamation suit by michael mann against mark stein as mark stein uh michael mann the director no michael mann the uh the climate change guy remember the the guy who manipulated all of the data oh michael mann the hockey this is the hockey stick guy the hockey stick guy and so mark stein probably on a throwaway said uh well this is bullcrap this is a lie this is manipulated data
Starting point is 01:53:57 and this was 12 years ago uh and and so you know he uh let me see if i can say what is exactly this little way to shut people up here about 12 years ago uh he added some comments to an internet post written by someone else his observations drew up oh here's the problem drew a parallel between jerry sandusky that's the the pen football coach the fiddler yeah the pedophile yes and man well he was he was he was a trainer guy it wasn't a coach yeah both man and sundusky were investigated by penn state's administration which stein characterized as a cover-up so that i guess that's where the problem stems from but so now in uh they're in court and we'll find out if that hockey stick chart was bull crap or not. And from what I understand, a lot of the experts that Stein wants to bring in are not being allowed,
Starting point is 01:54:55 because our justice system is great. So while that's happening, there's a pseudo-win in the European Union. Everyone's like, yeah, the farmers did it we beat the european union has dropped a key part of its 2040 proposal requiring agricultural emissions to be cut by 30 it's a big deal the move comes as spanish farmers staged protests across the countries you see right there using tractors to block roads in some areas they're joining farmers in germany france and other european countries who have held similar protests in recent weeks farmers are angry about rising costs high levels of bureaucracy and
Starting point is 01:55:37 competition from non-eu countries so here's what i understand what happened. The European Union said, we're going to drop this. You don't have to cut 30% in CO2. But two days before they did that, the EU commission set tougher climate targets, upping the CO2 level reduction from 55% by 2040, 2050 to 90%. So while everyone thought they got a deal, they actually got screwed. Huh? Yeah. And this is not reported it.
Starting point is 01:56:20 Oh, I mean, I got a report, but I have no, no news report. So that's all they did is said, all right, you know what I'm all they did is said, all right, we're going to screw these guys. We're just going to change this from 55, turn it up to 90. Yeah, we'll give you 30% off.
Starting point is 01:56:34 No, it's the same. So what did they get, 45? So they really got a 5% difference? How do you even count that anyway? Well, the farmers will figure this out well eventually but the the momentum is gone you know the momentum oh yeah we farmers go farmers you beat them farmers well the momentum has never achieved what the goals it should have achieved in the first place americans are totally unaware that this is going on oh because you don't see any of it. You don't want our farmers getting all up in everybody's grill.
Starting point is 01:57:07 If our farmers really got mad, I mean, that would paralyze everything. Yeah. I don't think we're going to. I don't think that's going to happen. Okay. I have two pharma stories, which I think are important.
Starting point is 01:57:24 The first one is, it's kind of a two-in-one story about depression and then about your immunity. And they both somehow can be measured in your blood. On the Medical Watch, a possible blood test to diagnose depression. Our medical reporter, Dena Baer, joins us now with this novel idea. Dena. Ben and Lourdes, Johns Hopkins researchers say they're making progress toward a simple test for psychiatric and neurologic disorders. They used genetic material from human blood, along with lab-grown brain cells. They say in the blood, they could see disease-associated changes in the brain linked to postpartum depression and other disorders.
Starting point is 01:58:11 Scientists say the footprints of brain cell-derived changes circulate outside the brain. With a blood draw, doctors say they can detect changes in gene activity inside the brain that indicate mental and physical diseases. So first of all, they talk about a lab-grown brain, which is just kind of glossed over. What are we drinking there, John? Ah, today's drink is Origin Refreshing Sparkling American Spring Water. Ah, is it just spring water? There's nothing else in it?
Starting point is 01:58:42 And it comes in a can? That's what it says. And it went pshh. Yeah, they didn't add any electrolytes. Is it carbonated? Because it went, psh. I heard it. Yes, it is.
Starting point is 01:58:49 It's sparkling. Sparkling. So, this kind of accentuates what I think is bullcrap, which is that depression is your brain chemistry. Oh, it's nothing you can do. It's not how you're thinking. It's not the thoughts. No, it's your brain chemistry oh don't it's nothing you can do it's not how you're thinking it's not the thoughts no it's your brain chemistry and now they can measure that being brainwashed yeah now they can measure that in the blood somehow so that'll be even easier oh oh doc i feel kind of depressed let me just prick your finger yep yep yep yep yep yep good to go here's some medication
Starting point is 01:59:23 and then when you're depressed well that's really bad for your immunity. We've long known stress can hamper immunity, and now doctors have figured out why. Mount Sinai researchers discovered stress increases an enzyme in the blood, which travels to the brain, altering the function of neurons. The hampered neurons lead to behavioral changes and reduced immune function. Study authors say knowing the mind-body mechanism, they hope to target the protein to treat stress related mental health as well as immune and nervous system diseases. And they believe testing for the protein could help them identify patients in need of treatment.
Starting point is 02:00:01 Sounds like a lot of expensive testing. by the way is so so depression equals stress i never heard that before yes and that equals low immunity which is why the shots didn't work don't you get it oh don't you get it yes because i get it i see your stress your stress that's why the shots don't work your immunity dees. So you should probably have another booster. I can't have a booster. Covalent. Now, let's look at mRNA because there's a lot of exciting news about mRNA. We have, my goodness, cancer vaccines being trialed, a dawn of a new age of treatments.
Starting point is 02:00:48 It's all mrna and bill gates the gift who keeps on giving he really really let it all hang out in this one minute clip as he admits admits what we've all been thinking and talking about have been told was conspiracy theory about the liponanoparticles. You know, the lipid nanoparticles self-assembling and doing stuff to you. Nah, that's just conspiracy theory. Listen to how jacked he is about mRNA. Making the mRNA is really easy and really cheap. Woohoo! Really?
Starting point is 02:01:23 It's really not just easy, it's easy and cheap. Making the mRNA is really easy and really cheap. Woohoo! Really? It's really not just easy. It's easy and cheap. Making the mRNA is really easy and really cheap. And that's the magic of this thing. But there's no doubt in the next five years, we can, you know, we just need to mess around. There's a lot of lipid nanoparticles. You just mess around a little bit with it.
Starting point is 02:01:42 You know, we just put this, we've already been trying it for the past few years, you know, the COVID shots. We'll mess around some more. We can, you know, we just need to mess around a little bit with it you would just put this we've already been trying it for the past few years you know the covert shots will miss around some more we can you know we just need to mess around there's a lot of lipid nanoparticles and some are very self-assembling there's no inherent whoa so first he laugh tells there's a lot of lipid nanoparticles i mean what there's just in your desk drawer? Or does he mean in people already? And they're self-assembling already. You know, we just need to mess around. There's a lot of lipid nanoparticles, and some are very self-assembling.
Starting point is 02:02:21 There's no inherent reason it's not thermal stable, it's not cheap, and it's not scalable. And so, as over the five years, we fix that part of it, mature it, which is very typical. We'll be able to build factories worldwide that can make $2 vaccines with even less lead time than we've had to have here during this pandemic. And we'll use those, as you suggest. For every disease that we don't have vaccines, we will try mRNA. In fact, for HIV, we have multiple ways, one that's more of a B-cell approach, one that's more of a T-cell approach. For malaria, we have multiple ideas. For TB, we have multiple ideas. And so to fill in the missing vaccines, we'll make a lot of our bets of the Gates Foundation and others who care about global health will be mRNA focused. Yay!
Starting point is 02:03:12 I recommend probably not taking it. Whatever he comes up with. And someone reminded me of a bill that has been in Congress. or it's not come to the floor, it's probably in committees, Senate Bill 596, which re-explains a lot of the push of the GLP-1, the semaglutide drugs, Wagovi, Ozempic, etc. drugs, Wagovi, Ozempic, etc. It is called the Treat and Reduce Obesity Act. And it spells out that they want these drugs
Starting point is 02:03:52 to be on Medicare. Yeah, because it's easy money. It's very easy money and Novo Nordisk just bought the manufacturing company that makes the injectables. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:04:07 Which is, now I heard on DH Unplugged, that's one of the only companies that does that. I think that's what we discovered. $16 billion acquisition. Nice, slouch acquisition. No, it's a great acquisition. I have a... I don't know what this is.
Starting point is 02:04:33 It's probably good. Any more COVID clips? No more clips. I was just looking if I had any other... I have two weird offbeat clips that we can interrupt things with. Okay. I want the Rona is out false claim clip. Hold on a second.
Starting point is 02:04:52 Rona is out false claim clip. Is this Amy? No, Amy. I do not have Amy today. Okay. In other political news, the chair of the Republican National Committee, Rona McDaniel, has reportedly agreed to resign after coming under intense pressure from Donald Trump. McDaniel plans to step down after the South
Starting point is 02:05:10 Carolina primary. Trump is reportedly pushing for Michael Whatley, the chair of the North Carolina Republican Party, to become the new head of the RNC. Whatley is a prominent election denier who endorsed Trump's false claims about the 2020 election being stolen. Hold on a second. Okay. Hold on. I have a question. I got a question. Okay. If Trump can just make everybody vote no, including Chuck
Starting point is 02:05:35 Schumer, I mean, why does he have to go through a whole weird can he just call up and say, Rona, you're out? New lady you're in? I mean, doesn't he have that power? There's a bunch of people that have to vote her in or out. He already tried to get her out like a year ago and he couldn't do it. They voted her in again. I thought he was powerful.
Starting point is 02:05:54 No, he is powerful enough to influence a couple of people. But the reason I play this clip is because I want to reiterate the bad journalism. And it's done by all the networks, it's done by Amy's group and everyone else to use the term false claim. It's either a claim or it's not a claim.
Starting point is 02:06:17 You can't have a false claim. I claim you claim that the moon landing never happened that's your claim that's what you're you it's based on a belief of yours it's not a false claim it's a claim science what is a false claim it the word makes the or that phrase makes zero sense and it's only used to target the individual being in this case trump to make him look like he's a liar because they like to promote the idea that he's a liar. Well, nobody even cares about about Biden's, you know, talk about a liar.
Starting point is 02:06:56 In fact, let's play Biden talking to Mitterrand. Last night, Joe Biden did his first campaign rally of the 2024 election in Las Vegas, Nevada. And during his speech, he claimed to have recently met with a French president who died. Hold on a second. Proper use of the word. Indeed. Proper use of the word. So you said they all do it.
Starting point is 02:07:20 In fact, your claim was false. It was my claim. You claim that all journalists do it. In fact, your claim was false. It was my claim. You claim that all journalists do this. No, I'm talking about, he didn't say false claim. No, I know. That's what I'm saying. You said all journalists use this. Oh, he's not a journalist. He's a TikToker. Oh, TikToker, much better than journalism in Las Vegas, Nevada. And during his speech, he claimed to have recently met with a French president who died over three decades ago. Yeah, this guy is losing it. Right after I was elected, I went to what they call a G7 meeting, all the NATO leaders. I was in the south of England. And I sat down and I said, America's back.
Starting point is 02:08:08 And Niteran from Germany, I mean from France, looked at me and said, said, you know, how long are you back for? This is great.
Starting point is 02:08:25 The sadness of that is that this is actually kind of a funny line, and he managed to deliver it well. But Mitterrand was dead. Well, first he said Mitterrand was from Germany, then he was from France. Yeah, which makes it even... But you know what they say. Dead people start to see dead people, or almost dead people.
Starting point is 02:08:44 When you're about to die, you see dead people. Maybe he's on the verge now. Maybe he's seeing dead people. He might be. Impossible. He's been shaking hands on the podium with people that aren't there. Okay. Here's one for you because this is something that you are an expert on.
Starting point is 02:09:03 You do this test yourself from time to time a quality this is not just a quality but a quantity test and people are getting pissed off mcdonald's is acknowledging it's time to put affordability back on the menu and add more options to its dollar menu its stock took a hit this week after the fast food giant reported a recent drop in visits by its key customers who make $45,000 a year or less. And a lot of people have taken to social media to complain about it. Joining us now is Vanessa Yurkovich. So Vanessa, McDonald's says with inflation cooling down at the supermarket, eating at home is becoming the more affordable choice for many here. Always has been. Yeah, people go to McDonald's because it's fast, it's reliable, it's affordable and tasty.
Starting point is 02:09:45 And for many Americans right now, they're saying that's just not the case. And that is because to buy groceries and eat at home, prices are only up 1.3 percent. Compare that to going out to dinner, 5.2 percent. But look at McDonald's prices. They have said that they've had to raise prices by 10%. This is great. This is fantastic. They're crazy. The quality is just crap.
Starting point is 02:10:14 It's getting worse. When's the last time you went? Don't you always go to try and eat a burger? I go quarterly. I've got a visit coming. I'm not sure when I'm going to go. But when I do, I'll be reporting in. But the hash brown, one hash brown is $3.
Starting point is 02:10:36 $3? You know how much a potato costs? Oh, you can get three pounds for three dollars. More. Yeah, you have hash browns for the rest of your life but this but you know these are trends you know so the trend is going to be more eating at home um there's a there's a cleansing and a shaking down there's a whole bunch of i didn't get again i didn't get clips on this but i didn't think about it there was a bunch of reports recently
Starting point is 02:11:00 about i think these are mostly played on fox on the fact that the Gen Z in particular don't go to bars. They drink at home. They're not going to go to bars because it's too expensive. As opposed to the Gen Xers, we used to do a show on Mevio that was a Gen X show. I'd have all these Gen X and we'd talk about stuff including their drinking habits and they were all
Starting point is 02:11:28 a bunch of alcoholics. Gen X are a bunch of drunks. But the Gen Zs, if they're drunks, no one's going to know it because they stay at home. You can't,
Starting point is 02:11:39 if you go out, I don't know when the last time you went out and had a drink. I went out to the Mallard Club for the meetup. A glass of wine these days, if you just want a glass of wine, Tina and I don't drink much, we'll each have a glass of wine.
Starting point is 02:11:52 30 bucks for two glasses of wine. Yes. No, you got ripped off. You must be going to, your places you're going to are too expensive. Or is that Texas wine? They always overcharge for that stuff we do there's this there's this place that reopened called uh friedlands which is a german like brat house um a schnitzel house yeah and that's fantastic they give you an eight german
Starting point is 02:12:20 german town like fredericksburg i hope they have something like that. Oh, yeah. It's really good. And it's really... And that's affordable. They do have these places. And it's better ingredients. The wine, you know, you just say... You get a Cabernet. It's got some fancy name on the menu.
Starting point is 02:12:36 I don't know where it's from. They bring it to you in a big glass that's really heavy. You know, like the kind that if it falls over, it'll never break. Even though it has a stem. It's German, yeah you know, like the kind that if it falls over, it'll never break. Even though it has a stem. It's German, yeah. It's German. It's $9.
Starting point is 02:12:51 You know, that's more reasonable. And it's an eight-ounce pour. That's more reasonable for a restaurant wine. But yeah. Yeah, I'd say. Everything is unaffordable. The Ubers are unaffordable. I mean, it's, what do they call that? Inflation. Yes Ubers are unaffordable. I mean, it's what they call that inflation.
Starting point is 02:13:06 Yes, that's what it is. Now, my last clip before we take a break, we talked during the pandemic and I'm pretty sure we put in the red book. I haven't been able to find a clip yet. I think we put it in the red book that people would probably never want to go back to work in office buildings. You may have. I'm sorry, in what? That people would not want to go back to work in office buildings. You may have even... I'm sorry, in what?
Starting point is 02:13:27 That people would not want to go back to work at the office. At the office, yeah. They'd rather work from home. Yeah. I think you even said no because I said, look at all this technology they're building. And Zoom exploded and Slack exploded and Microsoft Teams got used for everything.
Starting point is 02:13:43 And now they just can't get them back. And commercial real estate, that's the big talk here. But by the way, let's stop and make mention here. If you've worked from home, I mean, I've been a home office guy forever, but if you work from home and you enjoy it and you think you're productive and you're doing it during the pandemic and everything's going fine and you're getting your work done and everything, why would you want to go back to the office? And why would they want you back in the office when you're doing just fine? I think there's a I think there's a in the brains of the home of the people that work at home and like working at home. They don't understand why they should go back to the office when they know they're not as productive there agreed um but it's a real problem because we do not have solutions for the commercial real estate of course nope by the by the way i think my my prediction of apple vision pro is coming true
Starting point is 02:14:40 this is exactly not this version it'll take another version this is exactly, not this version. It'll take another version. This is exactly what people are living in their little home pods. You know, your little five by five house, you know, with your bed in the living room. This is called a tiny home. Yeah. Tiny home. This is what everybody's going to love. You know, just have your big house look bigger. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:15:01 You have your big monster screen mirrors on the walls and put one of those glasses on boom people in the mansion people think this is a dumb idea this is a dumb product i think it's a big winner it'll be the next version that'll be the big winner this is well it's a winner it's a winner i don't like it no i it looks horrible but i think it's google glass all over again it's better than google glass because it's spatial computing. It's not VR, AR, MR, mixed reality. It'll ruin your brain. Yes. How much more can we ruin?
Starting point is 02:15:33 It's great. No, it's exactly what we need. This is the future of the work-from-home worker, and everyone will be doing it, but the commercial real estate, I have no ideas for it other than putting the newcomers in there, which is probably the way to go. And our Secretary of the Treasury is kind of concerned. Yes, I do have a concern about commercial real estate. We discussed it in the FSOC annual report, and FSOC has been quite focused on it. The banking supervisors have also been focused on commercial real estate and are working closely with the banks they supervise to discuss ways to manage and work with borrowers who have problems. They're, in some cases, working to make sure that loan loss reserves are built up to cover losses,
Starting point is 02:16:41 that dividend policies are appropriate, that liquidity is adequate. So the higher interest rate environment, and in some cases, particularly the case of office building, shifts in work patterns due to the pandemic, coupled with many commercial real estate loans coming due and needing to be financed, refinanced in a context where vacancy rates in some cities are quite high, is going to put a lot of stress on the owners of these properties. And so the banking agencies are very focused in helping the banks manage through these situations. So you're concerned but not distressed? Yes, I mean, yes, I'm concerned. I believe it's manageable,
Starting point is 02:17:45 although there may be some institutions that are quite stressed by this problem. Yeah, like those regional banks. That doesn't seem to be going too well. Again, do you think they can keep it together until the collapse when Trump is in, as is our thesis? Oh, yeah, that shouldn't be a problem.
Starting point is 02:18:04 How do they do that, though? How do you do it? The interest rates aren't being cut, so the refinancing is all coming up. You do these, there's tricks. Oh, okay. Creative accounting, trickery. Trickery.
Starting point is 02:18:16 The banks, I don't know about New York's community is the big one that looks like it's going to fail. Yes, yeah. But it can sneak through. New York community is the one they gave signature bank to, and it was very interesting. Isn't that basically a bad bank? First they say, here, take this, take that, take this,
Starting point is 02:18:33 and now live with it. Yeah. Do they just make one bank take all the bad stuff and then blow that one bank up? That's a pretty good trick. I like it. That's one trick, but they're going to have to keep it going. The other thing is there is an issue with these you look at these empty buildings they're all over them and they were building them right through covid you know the skyline you could tell
Starting point is 02:18:55 they were putting up bigger and bigger buildings in new york is the one that you know if you remember we discussed this that the storefronts are all this was before covid the storefronts and they were buttoning everything up in New York, and it was kind of half dead because they were holding out. The landlords were holding out for more money. For the flip, for the flip, for the flip. And it never happened because COVID showed up, and the next thing you know, these guys are stuck holding the bag of useless real estate, high-end real estate. Warren Buffett 10 years ago, I think he got out of most of it and told everyone to get into rentals. Well, so what's happening here on Main Street is rents went from, for a typical store, from $10,000 a month to $30,000 a month.
Starting point is 02:19:45 Where, in Fredericksburg? Yeah, stores are closing left and right. Because the owners of these properties who don't live here, who just invested, they probably have to get more money to pay off the note. That's what I'm thinking. It's commercial real estate. It's the same issue. And the stores.
Starting point is 02:20:09 They're like. Nope. Except for the. There's this one store. And I think they're just money laundering. There's like some Lebanese in there. Or something. I don't know.
Starting point is 02:20:21 I don't know what they're doing. I never see anyone in the store. Yeah. When I see a store that's always empty and it's big and they advertise a lot and there's nobody there. Yeah, it's money laundering. There's got to be something. There was a clothing store. I can't remember. This was years ago, but I remember the place and
Starting point is 02:20:37 Horowitz and I talked about it and then it turned out to be one in San Francisco that I went by and it was exactly like what you're describing. Nobody, a big store, nobody's in the place at all. And it has to be some sort of money laundering operation for the drug business. But we're seeing the same with, you know, we have 25% of our housing here is Airbnb. It used to be B&B.
Starting point is 02:21:06 Let's just call it Airbnb. And people are having to sell those now because of the taxes. If you want to come to Fredericksburg, stay in an Airbnb, you have to take two nights. You can't just have one night. You have to take two nights. And before you know it, it's like two grand. It's like, go to Mexico. Go to mexico why would you come here yeah this but i think this
Starting point is 02:21:30 problem is everywhere right now i think so too i know it's a case in port angeles where mimi is in the planning commission because they're trying to kill all the uh airbnbs up there even though they're run by people just on a fixed income yeah they there's no real reason for it they're oh no this is no good can't have this in our bustling town which is you know half dead anyway all right one one uh one upbeat clip uh just before we take this break so we can just refresh our minds for a second, get back to the op. Japan is just as Taylor Swift obsessed as the United States. But, you know, it's not just about the fandom.
Starting point is 02:22:11 It's also about the economic revenue. Experts tell us that Taylor Swift's four-day concert will generate more than $230 million for Japan. Now, the burning question that I'm sure is on both of your minds, also on my mind, will Taylor Swift make it back in time by Super Bowl Sunday to kiss her boyfriend, Travis Kelsey? Now, I'm no betting woman, but I'm going to say with quite a bit of confidence that she will make it back in time. It does not take time travel, just a private jet, which she does own. And, you know, she kind of has to make it back for that Super Bowl because why else would we watch it? Am I right?
Starting point is 02:22:47 Well, you're definitely right. That is the burning question Phil has been bothering me about since 3 o'clock this morning. Will Taylor Swift be able to kiss Travis Kelsey? That's all I think about. That's all he thinks about. And I go, thank you very much. All right. Here's my prediction.
Starting point is 02:23:03 I might as well give it now. We can do it. You're talking about the football game? We do have another show before the football game. Yeah, but I just want to put it out there so I can get everybody all jacked up. We're at peak swift. I agree. Could not be much higher.
Starting point is 02:23:19 She got her fourth, by the way, she got her fourth Grammy for best album of the year. Topping. The Beatles. The Beatles. By the way, she got her fourth Grammy for Best Album of the Year. Topping. The Beatles. The Beatles. Well, no. No, Stevie Wonder. Remember the period of time where Stevie Wonder was winning and winning and winning?
Starting point is 02:23:38 Stevie wanted the music of genius, Stevie Wonder. Now, I know. I know. And you can't even hum a Taylor Swift song. Stevie Wonder had so many hits. Yep. And the albums were killer. And now she's okay.
Starting point is 02:23:50 Well, yeah. By the way. And then she waltzes into the Grammys during the show. With her fan. With her black fan. With her entourage. Yes, entourage. Yes. And it was like, how do they allow this?
Starting point is 02:24:03 Well, it's all a show. Did you see Olivia Rodrigo? That was the performance I was waiting for. Yeah, that's the Satanist. There was. Olivia, the poor Satanist. Red dress rubbing blood over her face and her chest. Beautiful.
Starting point is 02:24:19 Well done, everybody. Well done. Well done. Yeah, perfect. I'm glad to see that there's still full-on dervish, dervishness at the Grammys. Just beautiful. It was pretty, yeah.
Starting point is 02:24:32 Well, then, of course, the joke of the Grammys was Big Mike, who came out and praised God, got arrested. As the way it was put, he's praising God in a group of Satanists, and he got arrested immediately thereafter. Whoa, that's right. He touched the third rail of the Grammys. You can't do that, Big Mike.
Starting point is 02:24:52 We all know this. Poor Big Mike. Yes. So we're at Peak Taylor, Peak Swift. She has not adhered to the rule. When you seek out publicity for your own benefit, whether you're paid for it or not, it boomerangs. Yeah, always. And so what I'm feeling is Kels.
Starting point is 02:25:18 Is it Kels or Kelsey? Do we say Kels? I think it's Kels. It's Kelsey. Yeah, some people say Kels. Travis Kelsey. Whatever else they say, the family pronounces it Kelsey. The announcers who are professionals pronounce it Kelsey.
Starting point is 02:25:31 It's Kelsey. We'll keep it at Kelsey. Kelsey will fumble the ball. It'll be picked up by the 49ers. For the first time in my life, I'm going to say go 49ers. They will run it all the way for a winning touchdown, and Taylor will get all the blame. But they will hype Taylor and Kelsey by cutting to the aviation map,
Starting point is 02:25:58 showing, oh, here she is. She's over the Atlantic. She's on her way. It's like Santa Claus. Yes, exactly. NORAD will be reporting in if Taylor Swift is on her way. It's like Santa Claus. Yes, exactly. Norad will be reporting in if Taylor Swift is on her way. And then they'll cut away to her. Just like with the Grammy, she comes in late.
Starting point is 02:26:14 Probably during the halftime show, they'll cut away. Who's doing the halftime show, by the way? Do we know? Yeah, I know, but I can't think of it. You know who it is. And she will be blamed for the loss and and then she'll have to go as a distraction yes you'll have to sit down for a little while she'll be okay but this i mean what more could she achieve other than getting on elon musk's rocket and going to mars i mean
Starting point is 02:26:38 there's not much more she could achieve there is no she could achieve making making a really good song that would be an achievement and with that i'd like to thank you for your courage in the morning to you the man who put the sea in citizen trump say hello to my friend on the other end the one and only mr john c in the morning you mr m curry in the morning our ships at sea the boots of the ground to feed in the air the substance of the water and the games and the nights out there. In the morning to the trolls in that troll room. Hello, trolls. I don't know. I don't know.
Starting point is 02:27:08 Oh, my. 1742. Bad trollage. It's Thursday, isn't it? Yes. Well, the number's 1800 we're looking for. It's not bad at all. Well, but it's low.
Starting point is 02:27:21 You're supposed to say it's low. It's only low 50. Okay. All right. Well, I felt it was a little low. I just saw the 17 number. I'm like, it's low you're supposed to say it's low it's only low 50 okay all right well i felt it was a little low i just i saw the 17 number i'm like this low no the last sunday's number was the low one that was low low although a lot of people like a lot of people like last sunday's show at least they may have liked it but they weren't listening live necessarily oh that's why that's why well trolls are here trolls Trolls are in attendance.
Starting point is 02:27:46 They're just lowly. They're lowly trolls. Maybe they're just slow. You're all low. Low and slow. Most of the country's got bad weather. So they should keep the trolls. But they're digging snow.
Starting point is 02:27:59 Maybe they're doing things that are more important than listening to the show live. There you go. They can listen to the show when they feel like it. That's what podcasting is all about. Good point. We love our trolls, though, because they keep us on our toes. They get us information. They keep me very awake because it's always scrolling by out of my peripheral vision.
Starting point is 02:28:18 They're saying horrible things. And I was like, JCD is a national treasure. I was hyping you up. How is that a horrible thing? Well, to say that about you. That's a wise man or woman that said that. But for me, that's like, oh, Curry, you're full of crap. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:28:35 I know. It's like, I'm a lightning rod. You know how you can prevent that? By not watching. Stop looking at the troll constantly. Stop looking at the troll. No, the troll. You're always looking for the one-liners that somebody else writes.
Starting point is 02:28:46 Yes. Which is fine. That's what the pros do. That's what we do. Yes. Thank you. Thank you very much. You can join the trolls at trollroom.io.
Starting point is 02:28:53 It is a live chat room. You can also get to it with an IRC client, one of the oldest technologies on the internet, which is still very valid. It is great because you can- Internet relay chat. You can sit in the internet which is still very valid it is great because you can internet relay chat you can sit in the internet relay chat all day there are trolls logged in all the time there may be some people who have died and are still logged in on the troll room i believe this is to be true this actually could be true you log in from a unix machine at work and then forget about it and then you just it's just still running died suddenly died suddenly and you're still there um yeah you could be you could be on a limit you could be in
Starting point is 02:29:31 a virtual a virtual uh connection through running through aws on a subscription that doesn't that goes on for a couple of years you paid it in, and you could be in the IRC dead for years, literally. Isn't that... That's a great thought. I got to take a look at some of the login times for people who have been logged in the longest. Yeah, we better just have somebody go by their house. You can also get to this
Starting point is 02:30:02 through a number of the modern podcast apps. Good news. Guess who's back on all the apps, including the modern podcast apps? Joe Rogan. Joe Rogan. Oh, yeah. He's back now. His RSS feed was reactivated, and now you have no reason to use Spotify at all.
Starting point is 02:30:21 No. There was never a reason in the first place. Yep. And you'll recall that we declined to be on spotify we're not going to sign any rights away because that's what you had to do yes you saw sign this piece of paper nope we're not going to do that and i feel like we resisted it was good and now uh now everybody doesn't need to default to spotify you can get caller daddy and joe rogan and No Agenda show on any modern podcast app at modernpodcastapps.com, which also alert you within 90 seconds of updating of a
Starting point is 02:30:52 show. And I'm going to make sure that Joe gets on that program as well. People like that. Instead of waiting around like a refreshing, is it up yet? Is it up yet? No, you'll get notified immediately. Same happens with our live shows. When we go live, you get a notification. Value for value is how we have survived, how we've been just getting by for all these years, 16 years. You've kept us alive. You've kept us going through your time, your talent, your treasure. Part of that time and talent is the Troll Room, which has been with us for 14 of those 16 years, I think, 13 or 14. That's Void Zero. He's just kept that alive and going.
Starting point is 02:31:32 And people do many things for us. It really is quite phenomenal, the things that people do for the show, which is the polar opposite of what all the big money went to do. It's like, oh, we'll just take all this money and we'll hire people. We'll hire executive producers and executive executive producers and then a boss for those executive producers. And the programming will be great. It'll be just great. We're going to have hits everywhere. We don't have a hit.
Starting point is 02:32:01 We don't have a hit. We have proven that being number one doesn't matter. We can survive and we survive with you and it's also it's your boots on the ground reports so many of them once again i mean just amazing boots on the ground that people give us give us information that um that edifies us on the world in general because everyone's an expert in something when you hear us talking about something you have're an expert in. We have so many experts that listen to this show. It's amazing. I mean, how many emails did you get
Starting point is 02:32:30 about the B-1 bomber? I got, well, I only got two from super experts, people that are actually in the field. Did you know that thing goes Mach 2? Yeah, no, that's a fantastic product. I didn't know that. I didn't know it was called the bone, though. The bone. Mach 2, no, that's a fantastic product. I didn't know that. I didn't know it was called the bone, though.
Starting point is 02:32:45 The bone. The bone. Mach 2, isn't that the speed of the Concorde? Yeah. That's crazy. I didn't know that. And it was designed in 1970, I think, is the fact. Well, the Concorde. I didn't know.
Starting point is 02:32:58 High altitude. Yeah, it's true. The Concorde's back in the day, too. High altitude Mach 2. And it does not just carpet bomb it does surgical strikes so so see this is the information that is very good for us with that also comes um well all kinds of cool things like the no agenda art generator this is what paul couture has put together so that our artists another fabulous batch of um people who deliver
Starting point is 02:33:24 us their talent while they're listening live to the show. I mean, that's really what is so amazing is that they put this together while they're listening live. And we really have to thank Francisco Scaramanga for a fantastic, this was top notch, top of the line, no agenda art to the T. Episode 1631, we titled that Pulling a Johnson, which went well with the G.I. Cho artwork. I mean, this, of course, was one of the path to citizenships that we discussed on the previous episode. Come in as a Chinese national,
Starting point is 02:34:03 and as long as you serve in a military for a couple of years, you can be an American citizen. And he had it down, man. G.I. Cho had a little rice bowl there with his chopsticks. Didn't make it too racist. You know, had him kind of semi-Asian face, I would say. Yeah, it wasn't a super slant-eyed, racist-looking cartoon, which you could have done, but you didn't need to no it was
Starting point is 02:34:27 brilliant i mean really just a brilliant no it was it had a touch it was fine touch you put the 33 on the helmet the american flag on the helmet which is a way to do it the rice bowl with the chopsticks it it was a piece of uh and the chi gi cho with the red star of china in the middle it was a piece of, and the G.I. Cho with the red star of China in the middle. That was great. It was a nice touch, too. It was very good. Everything in this piece said winner. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:34:59 We looked at In the Wind by Darren O'Neill, who always comes in with something simple and AI generated. But that wasn't the winner. I thought Taylor Swift won't even listen to my podcast. It was cute. A little sigh up on the prairie. Cute. But the execution was, no, it wasn't the winner um i thought taylor swift won't even listen to my podcast was cute little sigh up on the prairie cute but the execution was no it wasn't there um pandora's pouch of problems was cute but no the gouda cheese talk that was kind of it wasn't we had a goat do we have a goat you have a goat screaming um what else do we have oh the um i kind of like the texting iran it was it just didn't weigh up against gi cho but the texting iran was like a text message and it's from the u.s military industrial complex nothing is off the table don't make us turn you into sand respond and then the iranian flag replies phone, who dis? That was cute.
Starting point is 02:35:46 That was funny. We didn't understand the nice tats by Pickle Surprise, although cute, you know, no agenda heart. Yeah, I don't get it. No, didn't quite get that one. That was it. Pickle Surprise also did the goat. Yes. I like the goat.
Starting point is 02:36:05 The goat's nice, but it wasn't going to win. And Commissure Blogger, he just keeps on throwing out AI, hoping it'll win. Which is not a bad idea. He does too many of the just generalized designs. Yeah. That we never picked at. I mean, sometimes for the newsletter i'll pull one of those down when i need something but it's not going to be a show cover he wanted me uh
Starting point is 02:36:33 let me see is i write this out he wanted me to promote no agenda gpt.com okay which is so he's put together all these chat gpt projects so you can go and ask something about no agenda today good well yeah that's the one that said that ryan seacrest had been running which the funny thing was it had gotten that from a transcript which indeed said ryan seacrest which was incorrect which was ai i mean it's like this is garbage in garbage out yeah it is it's it's not going to get any better no it's it's the model is model collapse it's going to start it's going to start corrupting basic historical data yeah by iteration yeah corruption by iteration show title
Starting point is 02:37:26 that's too long corruption by iteration is what's going to happen it's going to take over the world with just corrupt data and information we won't even know
Starting point is 02:37:35 what data it is we need a snappier phrase than corruption by iteration we'll probably have to talk to the consulting arm about that well you're gonna have to think about it i don't know if you can come up with anything better than that we love to thank thank
Starting point is 02:37:51 you artists thank you thank you to all the artists who participate we give you um the honest feedback because that's what you never get when you do jobs certainly not spec jobs no one was just it won't call you back they They just don't call you. They don't call you. Why did my art fail? I don't know. It won't call me back. Which people on the Mastodon
Starting point is 02:38:10 say, this shit and I'm the artist, man. No, no, no, no. We're giving you honest feedback. That's what we're doing. Are you, are you... Those are amateurs that don't know what they're talking about.
Starting point is 02:38:21 Are you even on the Mastodon anymore? I don't see you posting. Do you post anything? Yeah, I post all the time. Really? I'm posting like a maniac. I haven't seen anything from you recently. You blocked me.
Starting point is 02:38:31 I've not blocked you. I follow you. I follow you. I follow you. You're a creator and I follow you. I want to thank the people who deliver treasure to us. One of our three's of value for value and right off the bat
Starting point is 02:38:47 saving the day Anna Muirhead from Rye, New York no note that I could find 2,000 this is fantastic Anna why did you not send us a note
Starting point is 02:39:03 we want to thank you I did some research I looked up Anna every which way Fantastic. Anna, why did you not send us a note? We want to thank you. We want to know what's going on. I did some research. I looked up Anna every which way. And I even went back. I dug through the PayPal docs to find her donation to see if she had an offbeat email address. And indeed she did. That's how much work I did.
Starting point is 02:39:21 And so I looked it up. Still nothing. She's a baller. Big baller. Baller. Shock collar. 20 inch blades. Only in baller.
Starting point is 02:39:31 It's called baller. Baller donation. So she will send us a note when she feels like it. That's the way I see it. Yes, I sure hope so, Anna. Thank you very much, Double Up Karma, for your lack of notage. You've got... Double Up Karma. much double up karma for your lack of notice you've got karma
Starting point is 02:39:45 and then herbivore comes in from pittsburgh pennsylvania for three hundred and fifty dollars and ninety three cents um well that's interesting right yeah i think there's a donation missing from these this list um 350 93 thank you for your courage and pioneering efforts in Value for Value.
Starting point is 02:40:09 We got inspired from what we saw in December, so we're doing a V4V broadcast for our album release show on February 16th. Beginning today, the album will be posted via Wave Lake in three batches over the next few days leading up to the show. If you're stuck in the past on legacy apps, you'll find you'll need to wait until the 16th. Otherwise, find us on Wave Lake or your favorite modern podcast app. Details on how to join us in person at Bottle Rocket Social Hall in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania or within the Valueverse. Yes.
Starting point is 02:40:50 Brother, is this Ron Bloom? No, I actually came up with Valueverse. That's my term. Thank you. Oh, God. Thank you. I like the Valueverse. Well, that's where you got it from.
Starting point is 02:40:58 I'm contaminated. I love it. Can be found on theherbivoreband.com. Also testing our rig this Saturday at Practice to Work Out the Bugs. Stream starting at 6.30. Hope to catch Yinz. Y-I-N-Z.
Starting point is 02:41:13 Is that another one of your terms? No, not one of mine. That's what all the kids are saying. Yinz. At the show or online. Thanks. $3.50. $3.93.
Starting point is 02:41:22 Yeah, so people have figured it out. They're looking at value for value they're looking at the modern podcast apps and they're using it for their music exactly and they're promoting it on our show very good cliff uh reamer's ma reamer's ma milwaukee wisconsin 343 75 and he says i'd like a deduce you've been deduced and needs a relationship karma i hope you're looking for one you've got karma cliff or if you're in one we hope it stays good ip anonymously always a good gag south bend indiana three three three three three he wants yak and goat karma or goat karma but he sent a note in oh this was an interesting it was not just a note it was
Starting point is 02:42:12 it took up the whole pdf he opens a bunch of photos well what he did is he opened his drawer drawer why don't you read it well i'm going to read parts of it because it's five pages long. He opens up his drawer. I have a problem saying drawer. Drawer. Drawer. Drawer. Close enough. And he shows a picture, and there's four playing cards, like, you know, cards,
Starting point is 02:42:38 all with the face up, with the number up, and it's all threes. And he says, oh, my my gosh all threes popped up he says four of a kind three three extra heart and then he went in and asked chat gpt about the significance of 333 um and chat gpt said 333 is often associated with spiritual growth, protection, and divine presence. Interesting. Mathematics, 333.33 is the decimal representation of the fraction of one-third. It's also, I think, an angel number. All kinds of...
Starting point is 02:43:19 So he said, I had to donate. That makes total sense. And I think he added the fees for us. So the 333.33 plus the fees. No, I'm sorry. No, he didn't. He just came out 333.33. That's a good note.
Starting point is 02:43:36 And if that happens to you, people see it. The odometer. They get a bill. They see a check number. They see a hotel room. When you see those threes, you know it's time to support the No Agenda show. And he wants some Yak Karma. We got that for you.
Starting point is 02:43:52 No problem. You've got... Karma. Meanwhile, Zarin Densel comes in from Port Townsend, Washington for 333. But there's no note or anything that I can find, and so he gets a double up, Karma. You've got... Karma.
Starting point is 02:44:16 All right, then we have one in blue, which is always good news. Rich, Whiskey Bravo 4 Echo Hotel Golf in Davie, Florida. 73's Kilo 5 Alpha Charlielie on the var ac our first associate executive producer 256 he says i'm thrilled to finally become a knight after being a douche bag for too long it's the highlight of my week when i get to listen to an entire show who knew retirement would be so busy noting that this show is a this show number is a combination of 16 2 to the 4th 32 to the 5th this donation 2 5 6 2 to the 8th my birthday is 4 2 to the 2nd 2 2 to the 1st and 1 2 to the oath so please knight me as sir powers of 2 protecting davy florida at the round table i'd like frozen titoito's vodka and Nathan's hot dogs with fresh buns.
Starting point is 02:45:06 Is there any other kind of bun? No jingles, only douchebag karma. We're going to de-douche it for that. You've been de-douched. And we'll give you karma. Thanks, Rich. You've got karma. So there's a note. There's one that got lost in the shuffle, and I'm pretty sure it came in on time, and I'm going to just read it from the email.
Starting point is 02:45:29 Okay. This is from, did we get it? Hold on a second. Sorry. I'm holding on. Stopping the show. Do we have to really stop the show? No, never mind.
Starting point is 02:45:40 It's something else. I'll keep looking. Let me go on. You just read Rich. Let's go to Ethan Moss. Moss. Who's in Birmingham, Alabama. 2-2-2. Let me go on. You just read Rich. Let's go to Ethan Moss. Moss. Who's in Birmingham, Alabama. 2-2-2.
Starting point is 02:45:49 Row of Ducks. Row of Ducks on my 33rd birthday in gratitude for this fantastic podcast. That's us. Yes. In the morning to both of you, gentlemen, and please de-douche me. You've been de-douched. Thanks for helping make sense uh it's you know it's amazing to me how many people are on the 33rd birthday that listen to this show and and when it's like a grouping around when they started listening they were um 16 thanks for the helping me make
Starting point is 02:46:22 sense of all the madness biscuit for my birthday um let me grab one i have them fresh from the oven here it is they always give me a biscuit on my birthday boom oh that's it zadok zadok zadok brown the third uh makawao hawaii rove ducks 222 deconstruction you guys provide is fantastic uh thought wonder if the thought wonder if these millions brought in are being digitized they will be a component to new digital economy what what is he saying oh the millions being brought in i guess he's talking about the newcomers. I guess. If they're being digitized. Yes, yes, they will be tokenized. That's all he's got.
Starting point is 02:47:15 Oh, I'm sorry. Yes. So let's go to gigawatt coffee roasters. And I had a whole, I ran out of my black rifle and it was in the mail because I'm on a subscription. And I had one of the gigawatts.
Starting point is 02:47:34 Very tasty. Rivaled the black rifle, I should say. Well, I would suggest people check out the Peaberry that they have have which is a pea berries an interesting uh coffee bean uh let me read the thing and i'll talk about it in a second a gigawatt coffee in bensonville illinois 211 33 all producers should consider going to an
Starting point is 02:48:00 na meetup it's good to get out of your comfort zone and break bread with strangers. You'll learn new things, exchange ideas, and who knows, you might even just make a new friend. A shout out to everybody who came to the Naperville, Illinois meetup last Tuesday. I'm looking forward to the next one. Thank you, John and Adam, for creating this community of people with such wide ranging views and backgrounds indeed i'll take some og pelosi jobs karma in hopes of finding my next awesome employees looking for work oh looking for use the code itm 20 for 20 off your first gigawatt coffee roasters.com stay caffeinated eli the coffee guy. Okay, so Peaberry. Wow, I'm glad you can get to the Peaberry, yes.
Starting point is 02:48:53 Peaberry is, which always traditionally, it's like a midget berry. And they call them Peaberrys. It's like when you see the coffee bean, the bean is a berry. It's a bean. The bean is like half the size of a normal coffee bean. It's a little bitty thing. They used to be discarded because they don't, you know, you want in the olden days when you went and had your coffee, you want a big, fat, healthy looking beans. You didn't want these little minuscule beans. But it turns out when you make coffee from the Peaberry, sometimes it's terrific tasting.
Starting point is 02:49:20 It tastes better. And this has only been recently discovered by coffee people because they needed to i don't know make more money and the gigawatt guys have some pea berries people should maybe check it out the more you know in the morning jobs jobs jobs and jobs Let's vote for jobs. You thought karma. Alright. Sir Boober checks in with 20720 from Nevada, Iowa. At ITM I'm donating in honor of the fourth anniversary
Starting point is 02:49:54 of my wife's passing. That was February 7th. Oh man, Sir Boober, I'm sorry to hear that. But we will say a prayer for her and think of her and for you. Can I please get an F cancer and a goat karma for everybody's health? Yes, you can. Thank you, Sir Boober.
Starting point is 02:50:14 You've got karma. I have a message from my wife. Yes. Who was a Nevada native. Nevada native nevada iowa no nevada state oh yes i don't know how they pronounce it there but it's pronounced nevada nevada and she says you keep pronouncing it nevada and it makes her cringe me yeah i say nevada yeah you just said it. No, but it's supposed to be Nevada. Yeah, Nevada. And it makes her cringe?
Starting point is 02:50:47 Yeah, when you say Nevada. I'm so sorry. Cringe. Nevada, from now on... She just told me to tell you. I got nothing to do with it. I don't care. She got my email.
Starting point is 02:50:56 She got my digits. She can hit me up on WhatsApp. She can slide into my DMs. She fears that you'll chew her out. For anyone who knows Mimi, this is very funny. Benjamin Nitis is in San Francisco. He came in with $203.24. Failed to hit up the ATM and only put $30 into the envelope.
Starting point is 02:51:20 He's talking about the meetup. He was at the meetup. So here's some more treasure to commemorate the state's second Get John Out talking about the meetup. He was at the meetup. So here's some more treasure to commemorate this date. Second, get John out of the house meetup. Club Mallard was epic. The bartender loves us. Well, let's see. Let me think why.
Starting point is 02:51:39 Three o'clock in a Saturday afternoon when the place is normally three o'clock in a saturday afternoon dead empty and now you have 40 customers who are giving tips and making the liven up the place i wonder why anyway so he says i had a wonderful time chatting with uh jay's fiancee that's brennan brennan yeah yeah very good uh sir crystal ball Sir Crystal Ball, Dallas, Texas, 20202. Love that. Just an overdue value for value donation. Thanks for what you're doing, Sir Crystal Ball. Thank you very much, Sir Crystal Ball.
Starting point is 02:52:15 We appreciate that. That leads us right to Linda Lupatkin in Lakewood, Colorado. Coincidence? I think not. $200. Jobs Karma for everybody. And for a competitive edge, go to imagemakersinc.com for all your executive resume and job search needs. That's imagemakersinc.com or just find Linda Lupatkin under the show's producer list.
Starting point is 02:52:37 Someone hit me up on the Mastodon and said, how come you haven't damed her yet? I said, I think she refuses. I don't know what. If she wants to be damed, she has to ask for it. I think we have asked her. We just don't do it automatically. No, I think we have said, hey, isn't it time? She could be way beyond a dame by now.
Starting point is 02:52:55 No, she's probably baron. Baronette. Baronette, yeah. So Linda Lou Patkin, we'd love to bring you up on the podium. Or baroness. It'd be baroness. Baroness would be perfect. Here it is.
Starting point is 02:53:04 Jobs, jobs, jobs, andess. It'd be Baroness. Baroness would be perfect. Here it is. Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. You've got karma. Well, thank you, executive and associate executive producers, for supporting the No Agenda Show, episode 1,632. Good news. Oops, didn't mean to hit that one.
Starting point is 02:53:25 This is what I meant to hit. Here we go, John. Get ready to sing. Donate. To No Agenda. Yeah, baby. This is going in your brain. To send your friends a news.
Starting point is 02:53:41 No Agenda Donations. Donations. There you go. You can support us at NoAgendaDonations.com There you go. You can support us at NoAgendaDonations.com We certainly appreciate everyone who comes in under $50. We don't mention those. We do do time and place of everyone between $200 and $50.
Starting point is 02:53:55 And of course, if there's a karma in there, we'll handle that as well. We really appreciate it. The executive and associate executive producers, these are credits that are valid forever. You can use them on your LinkedIn. You can use them on your resume. Go to imdb.com.
Starting point is 02:54:09 If you don't have one of those, most people don't. Open it up. They're completely valid. And if anyone questions these credits, let us know. We'll vouch for you. John, take us through the 50s. Yeah. Rita Harrington, our buddy at the top of the list in Sparks, Nevada.
Starting point is 02:54:24 I think she is a dame. $166.33. Ruben Schwebel in Tampa, Florida, $133. He says the last show was the best show ever. Oh, 100%. 100%. Bruce Schwalm in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Russell Rhodes, 10641.
Starting point is 02:54:47 It's a birthday for his son, Vikram. Vikram, Vikram, Vikram. Vikram. FreshTech LLC in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. I'm guessing, or RefreshTech. I'm guessing that, RefreshTech. I'm guessing that is a networking company dave at elkhart indiana 100 he needs a dedouching you've been dedouched he calls it remedial since
Starting point is 02:55:16 he's given before jacqueline lintz in muskego wisconsin 100 100. Pat Sullivan in Sturgeon County, Alberta, Canada, 100. Eric Adler in Punta Gorda, Florida, 8008. Megan Reitchie in Boise, Idaho, 8008. And boom, Kevin McLaughlin in Concord, North Carolina, 8008. Don't be a boob, save one instead. or North Carolina 8008. Don't be a boob. Save one instead.
Starting point is 02:55:47 Donald, I'm sorry, Arwin Schulte in St. Albans, Great Britain, 75. Donald Thompson, 73, 73. Dame Jen in Boise, Idaho, 66, 11. This is the dangling balls and double dicks donation that Christie started on Sunday. Oh, here they come here they come we'll see we'll see if it catches on it'll catch on by the ladies yeah yeah like it michael's yes i cora in new richmond wisconsin 6006 a call out to craig sakura and kim sax as Sacks as douchebags. Douchebag. That's Craig and... Douchebag.
Starting point is 02:56:26 You got it, Craig and Kim. Grayson Insurance in Aurora, Colorado, 6006. Spencer Pollock in Tulsa, Oklahoma, 6006. That's a switcheroo there. Please credit to a smoking hot wife, Guantanamo Bay. And add her to the birthday list, even though I don't see that she's on the yellowed out here. Let me check. She may be missing from the birthday list,
Starting point is 02:56:49 which would be the first flaw that we have on the spreadsheet. I think I'm going to put her on. She's not on? No, no, no. Guantanamo Bay. I'll put her on. There you go. Sir Ladyboy in Mount Laurel Township, New Jersey, 86006.
Starting point is 02:57:06 That Dame Stitchy Woman, Rogersville, Alabama, 60. And we got a birthday coming up for someone. Charles Mybach, M-I-E-B-A-C, and Vintage. Vintage. Wantage. Wantage, New Jersey. Can't get this one right. No. 58, 33, birthday donation. That's on the list.
Starting point is 02:57:32 I need to use a de-douching. You've been de-douched. Les Starkowski in Kingman, Arizona, 58. Eric Hulse in Richmond, Texas, 57, 27. Christine Hines in Manchester, New Hampshire, 5555. Michael Gates, 5280. Scott Evers in Venus, Texas, 52. John Foley in Chicago Heights, Illinois, 52.
Starting point is 02:58:01 Stripe test, I don't know what that means. He tested Stripe. He tested Stripe and it works. Oh, it's Stripe. Okay, yeah, that is a Stripe donation. Sir Anonymous Cop in Redwood City, California, 5150. MWG in Louisville, Kentucky,
Starting point is 02:58:18 51. No, that's Maxine Waters Gravel who's back. Need to de-douche it. You've been de-douched. Good to have you back, Maxine Waters Gravel, who's back, needs a dedouche. You've been dedouched. Good to have you back, Maxine Waters Gravel. The last of these are all $50 donors. I'm going to do name and location, starting with Alex Zavala in Kyle, Texas, and Michael Labarre in Williamston, Michigan.
Starting point is 02:58:42 Alexandro Wenka in Neosho, Wisconsin. He's de-douching. You've been de-douched. Kristen Doherty in New York City is wishing a happy birthday to her smoking hot boyfriend Bubz.
Starting point is 02:59:01 And wants a biscuit. They always give me a biscuit on my birthday. There you go. Matthew Smith in Colchester, Suffolk, UK, 50. Ryan Tiernan in North Providence, Rhode Island, 50. Jonathan Ferris in Liberal, Kansas. Justin Cruz in Tehachapi, California. Robertson Holm in Flint, Michigan.
Starting point is 02:59:23 Stephen Ray in Spokane. Edward Mazurek in Memphis. William Kidwell in Dover, Delaware. George Wuchet, Sir George in La Vernia, Texas. Capic Chiropractic in Capic, Michigan. Kerry Jackson in Watertown, Tennessee. Jason D'Aluzio in Miami Beach. William Dolgage or Dolgage, I'm sure, in Bristolville, Ohio.
Starting point is 02:59:54 Baroness Knight, Baroness Dame Knight in Edmonds, Washington. Arden Howell in Naperville, Illinois. Needs a de-douching. You've been de-douched. And Sir Mix in Fort St. John, B.C. That's our group of contributors to show, a good group. Very good group. To show 1632.
Starting point is 03:00:18 I want to thank each and every one of them for helping out. Which you've done. Yes, and thank you to everyone who came in under 50 dollars a lot of people do 49.99 in fact we have a donor anonymous says keep me anonymous you're anonymous anonymous no problem under 50 we don't read them and special thanks to all those who came in with our sustaining donations they are very important you can you can set up your own it's a recurring thing you can say can you set up the recurring with Stripe as well or only on PayPal? Do you know?
Starting point is 03:00:47 There's a question for you. I think you can do some recurrent stuff. The Stripe is somewhat limited compared to the variety you get on PayPal. Either way. But it does the trick. We love time, talent, and treasure. Thank you all so much. Thank you to Clip Custodian and our collectors, Steve Jones and Dave Ackerman.
Starting point is 03:01:06 Love what you do. You really help out the show. It's like having your own personal production team. Thank you all so much. It is very much appreciated. And of course, to our executive and associate executive producers one more time. And remember us at Dvorak.org slash NA or the fancy new place, NoAgendaDonations.com. And thank you for supporting episode 1,631. Our formula is this. We go out, we hit people in the mouth. Order.
Starting point is 03:01:41 Shut up, slave. Shut up, slave. Shut up, slave. It's your today, actually. We have Russell Rhodes who wishes his son Vikram a happy birthday. He's 14 today. Charles Meebok, or Mybok, turns 33 today. Dame Catherine the Patient says happy birthday to Sir Saturday Night. His birthday is today.
Starting point is 03:02:19 He produced the I Got Ants song. Yes, we remember it very well. That Dame Witchy Woman turned 60 tomorrow. Ethan Moss is turning three. Kristen Doherty wishes her smoking hot boyfriend Bubs a happy birthday. And just added to the list, Guantanamo Bay is 38 today. Happy birthday for everybody here at the best podcast in the universe. We have an upgrade for Baroness Love and Light. She has contributed more to the best podcast in the universe.
Starting point is 03:02:55 And now she becomes Viscountess Love and Light Protectorate of Morton Bay, Queensland. I'm presuming that's Queensland, Australia. So thank you very much, Baronet. We appreciate it so much. We have a two nights here. I have a night note from a layaway night. This is from Matt Smith. Dear John and Adam, long-term listener
Starting point is 03:03:15 from Gitmo Nation East, that's the UK, just completed the $50 layaway plan. Thank you for your sanity. Please knight me, Sir Smithlar of the Constable Country. Constable Country. No jingles, just smithlar of the constable country constable country no jingles just karma for all of the fellow producers we'll give you that karma right now thank you you've got karma and we'll get everything set up here i have my sword for our two nightings john you got here you go i got one oh sharp so matt smith hop on up along with rich
Starting point is 03:03:44 whiskey bravo for echo Golf, both of you have supported the No Agenda Show in the amount of $1,000 or more. I am therefore very proud to pronounce the Kate Thea's Knights of the No Agenda Roundtable, Sir Smith Blar of Constable Country, and Sir Powers of Two, protecting Davie, Florida. For you, gentlemen, we have Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys and Chardonnay, Frozen Tito's Vodka, and Nathan's Hot Dogs with fresh buns. Is there any other way to have them? Also, we've got Harlots & Haldol, Pepperoni Rolls & Pale Ales, Mastachioly & Margaritas.
Starting point is 03:04:16 We've got Ruben S., Ruben & Rosé, Gays & Sake, Vanuk Vodka & Vanilla, Bong Hits & Bourbon, Sparkling, Saturday Escorts, Ginger Ale & Gerbils. And, of course, we've got the Mutton & Mead. It's all set up right over here. Both of you go to noagendarings.com. There you can see the rings that you achieve upon acquiring your damehood or your knighthood. They're signet rings, so you get some wax to seal your important correspondence with that,
Starting point is 03:04:40 along with the certificate of authenticity and our deepest gratitude for supporting the No Agenda show. No Agenda meetups. Well, you heard a nice donation note earlier. No Agenda meetups, not just a diverse group. But you can meet people, you know, who you don't know from social media. These are people who listen to the show. And you can just hang out with them. You can have a good time.
Starting point is 03:05:07 You can talk about the state of the world. You can talk about love. You can talk about politics. It's all good. No one gets triggered. It's all fine. This is what's so nice about it. Here, I'll give you an example.
Starting point is 03:05:17 Here's a report from Northwest Houston. Hi, this is Economic Hitman. We're here having the eighth Northwest Houston No Agenda meetup. It's been great. I can't believe so many people came, and I just feel so blessed. In the morning, this is Dame Shanarkey reminding you that connection is protection and taxation is theft. This is Sarah Turner from Fort Worth coming up to Houston to see what all the fuss is about. In the morning, this is loca.
Starting point is 03:05:44 Get crazy, people. In the morning, this is loca. Get crazy, people. In the morning, this is bad. In the morning, Sir Keeper of Vox. Hey, it's Andy Jane, and I just wanted you to know that Rolando is not from Dallas. He's not here tonight, but he is from H-Town. ITM, it's Lady Vox,
Starting point is 03:06:00 Dame of the Gateway. Thank you for your courage, and thank you for inspiring this fine community. In the morning! I like Lady Vox's voice. You should do some jingles for us. I like that. I like Lady Vox. She sounds like a professional. She does.
Starting point is 03:06:17 She sounds like Alison Steele, the night bird. A little bit. And also, yes, I misidentified Rolonzalez being from dallas he is from big h absolutely here's what's coming up um nothing today but on saturday we have no agenda local 5 12 bring your valentine meet up this is the big valentine's day meet up doc's backyard sunset valley austin texas of course baron scott of the no agenda armory organizes that with his beautiful wife and they have a good time go join them y'all also on saturday you can't spell aquarius without an ai age of aquarius 230 at castle island brewery in northwood massachusetts sir nathan lee miller foster
Starting point is 03:06:57 chaotic good night of the white lodge blue orchid of the Good Heart, Mountaintop, Queen Directory, Elfstone, and Bear of the Sword Reforged. We'll be hosting that, and there will be a test of his name. Arlington, Virginia, new location for their meetup at 5 o'clock on Saturday, the Renegade in Arlington, Virginia, and Surf Soiree will be taking place on Saturday at 5 o'clock. Now, this is in Portland, Oregon. You have to RSVP special details, so who knows? will be taking place on Saturday at 5 o'clock. Now, this is in Portland, Oregon. You have to RSVP special details, so who knows?
Starting point is 03:07:30 It could be a very fun little meetup. There's plenty more to see at noagendameetups.com. Thank you, Sir Daniel, for keeping that together. Thank you for Mimi for always keeping the list updated. And thank you all for joining the No Agenda Meetups. You can't spell unity or community without unity, and connection is protection. Noagendameetups..com if you can't find one near you start one yourself you wanna be where everybody feels the same it's like a party it's just like a party
Starting point is 03:08:10 everybody like a party now to the part that everybody loves so much are we trying to figure out which end of show iso we will be using what do you have i'm not hopeful today oh well then you go first since you're not hopeful don't look don't look at my butt okay little little soapy in the audio don't look at my butt very funny wow wow wow you're big on the wows these days wow wow oh you're big on the wows these days wow wow yes it's i like the i like the sound of it let me see what i've got here i've got uh true fans keep it real no that's just too that's not good how about this one thank you so much nice meeting you kind of like that one and thank you guys y'all have a great one i like that one yeah i do too let's go with And thank you guys. Y'all have a great one.
Starting point is 03:09:06 I like that one. Yeah, I do too. Let's go with that. Thank you guys. Have a great one. Okay. Yeah,
Starting point is 03:09:10 we'll go with that one. No problem. Good news. Good, good news. Good news. Good, good news. Good news.
Starting point is 03:09:16 That's right. Good news. We always end the show with some good news so that you're all up and happy as you go into the next few days without us. We know it's tough. Uh, John scours the internet. We know it's tough. John scours the Internet to wait for Mimi's email when she sends the actual good news clip. What do we have?
Starting point is 03:09:32 Actually, a lot of people send them in. Of course. Well, this one here I have to talk about a little bit after it's over. Okay. This is a little girl saves her sister. Constant quick trip turning into a nightmare. Someone just stole my car on 27th Street with my two kids in the car. But an eight-year-old girl's quick thinking.
Starting point is 03:09:52 I was scared. I was like, what's happening? Saving her and her sister after a shocking carjacking. I was really just about an arm's length away from my car. Adam Jorgensen says he went to grab a cloth to dry off his vehicle after a car wash when someone asked him for directions. Then suddenly... I heard the screeching of our tires. The car was gone, with his daughters, 2-year-old Autumn and 8-year-old Charlie, in the back seat. He told me to get out of the car.
Starting point is 03:10:17 I was like, oh, what should I do? Should I run and be a scaredy cat or should I save my sister too? Charlie telling our affiliate WTMJ she knew her dad had the keys, not the carjackers, and she decided to stay put. The driver ditched the car and the kids at the Batteries Plus store about a mile down the road. And Charlie acted fast, her little sister panicking. Where'd go dad get her? I don't know! Grabbing her dad's phone from the front of the car and calling her mom leaving this message their dad back a quick trip frantically on the phone with police
Starting point is 03:10:55 they are over by batteries plus and an officer is going to come over and meet you at the quick trip okay all right but you guys have my the incident reflecting a bigger trend in carjackings, rising 17% from 2022 to 2023 in nearby Milwaukee. And nationally, carjackings up 93% from 2019 to 2023, according to a new Council on Criminal Justice report tracking rates across 10 U.S. cities. Back in Oak Creek, the police department said it took three suspects into custody and is seeking felony charges this week.
Starting point is 03:11:26 Now, a family reunited. I ran as fast as I could out of the back of that cop car to hug them. Hoping others will learn how quickly things can go wrong. Remember you won't bother drying your car? Ah, yes, we'll dry the car at home now as well. That's right, people. Law enforcement doing their job. Good job. I call bullshit. Oh.
Starting point is 03:11:48 Did you do? I think this whole clip is a hoax. A hoax? Oh, no. What makes me think that? What makes you think that? One, we have a recording of the little two-year-old saying, where's daddy?
Starting point is 03:11:59 Where's daddy? Where'd they get that recording? There's the car rigged with microphones. Second, we have a recording of the eight-year-old's phone call to mom saying daddy's been is missing. Who's recording that call? Does mom have a recorder on the phone? Where did that where did that little clip come from? And then to say that the eight-year-old knew that daddy had the keys while the guy's driving off.
Starting point is 03:12:22 That's the last thing I'd be on a kid's mind. The thing was to promote the little message in the by the way this on here the hallie's news thing on nbc this is an nbc clip i think of notorious for phoning up stuff and so then meanwhile there's the uh the whole thing it's it was to promote this this data on because right in the middle of it there's like an advertorial about carjackings and how they've gone up so much. I find that this is, I think this whole clip has been staged. Let's review the rules of the good news clip.
Starting point is 03:12:59 It's supposed to make you feel good and now you just made us feel bad. I didn't make anybody feel bad. It's still a cute clip. No, it was. I felt good until you just said it was all bogus. And I love the cute little kid. And you just made me feel horrible.
Starting point is 03:13:18 Okay, well, I'm sorry. That'll never happen again. You better believe it won't happen again. No deconstructing the news. The good again. No deconstructing the news, the good news clips. No deconstructing good news, even though it's a hoax by NBC. No sex in the champagne room. No deconstructing the good news clip. I just want to go out happy.
Starting point is 03:13:38 And now I'm depressed. You can see it in my blood. Jeez. Well, luckily, we will... Get a booster. Luckily, we'll be back on Sunday where we'll end with a very good news clip. Which will make you happy and feel good.
Starting point is 03:13:56 Feel good. Coming up next on noagendastream.com or a modern podcast app, we have DH Unplugged. It's the AI Market Euphoria, Episode 689. See who's closest to the pin. Before we get to that, though, we will have our end-of-show mixes
Starting point is 03:14:14 from Stefan, Steve Atwell, and Jesse Coy Nelson. Some classics and some new ones in here. And coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region No. 6. In the texas hill country here in fema region number six in the morning everybody i'm adam curry and from northern silicon valley where i remain it's nice and sunny i'm john c devorek we return on sunday please join us won't you for another three hours of deconstruction but not the good news clip remember us at devorek.org slash na no agenda donations.com until then adios mofos, a-hooey, hooey, and such.
Starting point is 03:14:47 You talked about using some of Trump's money that you're about to get. Do you know what that might be, what that might look like? Yes, Rachel. Yes. I have such great ideas for all the good I'm going to do with this money. First thing, Rachel, you and I are going to go shopping. Completely new wardrobe, new shoes, motorcycle for Crowley, new fishing rod for Robbie. Rachel, it's yours, Rachel. And I was going to France.
Starting point is 03:15:20 You want France? You want to go fishing in France? No? Oh, I see. Although, if me fishing in France could do something for women's rights, I would take the hit. You know, I would obviously take one for the team. As if you need persuasion in that regard. There it is.
Starting point is 03:15:43 As if you need persuasion in that regard. There it is. Is it on? Yes, it is. When President Biden comes to the North Country, he comes to belittle people. Can you believe it? It's great to be home. Folks, look, over a period of time, we stopped investing in that.
Starting point is 03:16:03 And we're now back. This new thing has made a lot of work. It's stunning that we've gotten to this point. No, I'm not joking. I'm being deadly earnest. It sounds like I'm making this up. That was here two years ago. It's not a joke.
Starting point is 03:16:18 We've already invested $6.1 billion. That's on top of another billion dollars. $1.1 billion in your estate. $2.5 billion. $200,000. We'll be right back. But you know what? That's okay. I know it sounds like it doesn't make any sense. It doesn't matter. It matters a great deal. And guess what? No matter how many drugs you have to take, that's our economic plan. You may have heard me harp on this for a while. Not anymore.
Starting point is 03:16:58 And guess what? It affects the ability of the brain to function. Oh, Earth driver, thanks for the great work. And we're now back. This move is going to need a lot of work. I'm not joking. I'm not like I'm making a show. in the brain to function. Oh, Earth driver, thanks for the great labor. And we're now back. This movie just needs a lot of work. I'm not joking. I'm not,
Starting point is 03:17:08 it's like I'm making a show. I was told that that's an awful thing to do, man. And guess what? Look, for my entire career, I have been the best in the world.
Starting point is 03:17:18 And you pay for it. Not a joke. Generals gathered in their masses. This is a memo that describes how we're going to take out seven countries in five years. Just like witches at black masses. When I first came to office, one of the first meetings I had was at the Pentagon with generals. gone with generals. Evil minds that plot destruction.
Starting point is 03:17:51 Bolden has always said, let's go to war, but he's not the one who's going to go on the forefront. He's a coward. Sorcerer of death's construction. The leaders of Iran are racketeers. Behind every problem is Iran. War! I don't want your war! Behind every problem is Iran. They heard what you said in 2016 and liked it when you said no more stupid wars.
Starting point is 03:18:19 You've got a rogue president in the White House surrounded by these Uber hawks that thirst for another war with Iran. The International Atomic Energy Agency has never found Iran in contravention of stipulations in the deal. We don't need your war! If Iran wants to fight, that will be the official end of Iran. Never threaten the United States again. I'm not somebody that wants to go into war. In the United States, heading towards another Middle East showdown, this time with Iran? Let's have a war so you can go die. Let's have a war.
Starting point is 03:18:55 The best podcast in the universe. Oboe. Dvorak.org. Slash N-A. Thank you, guys. Y'all have a great one.

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